Writing

  • Post-snob

    In our consumer-driven society it seems like you can become a snob about almost everything. I don’t mean this in a purely negative sense, but rather the idea that you can get increasingly obsessed and aware of more subtle nuances of anything. This might be sports cars, coffee, or vacuum cleaners – every category of thing can be an area of specialization and opinion.

    I will fully admit that there are things in my life, namely coffee and wine, in which I am probably still in the snob category. But as I think about interests I’ve had in the past, and my journey into them, I have a theory I have been wanting to share.

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  • Beatings & Morale

    If you join a zoom call with me, my background isn’t a perfectly curated bookcase or beautiful plants, its this flag …

    pirate flag

    I chose this, not only because it was hanging in the developers section of my first office job, but because it is the antithesis of how you build a good culture.

    Sadly this mindset is all too common and so dejecting. I recall working at an office where the production team wanted their area painted (a small request), but the business team wouldn’t do it until revenue targets were met – something the production team was not even responsible for!

    At StoryTap, one of our five values is Family. We want to support our team members personally and professionally, proactively helping them so they can do the best job possible. We haven’t always got this right, but seeing that flag behind me is a constant reminder of how important team morale is and how I don’t want to operate.

  • The Seas Roar

    Let the sea roar, and all that fills it;
        the world and those who dwell in it!

    Psalm 98:7 ESV

    As I travel through a somewhat turbulent North Pacific ocean, with nothing but water as far as the eye can see, the verses in the Psalms that speak of the seas are seen in a new light.

    I am in awe of their size and power, and my own insignificance and lack of control in comparison. And yet, these verses are a comfort, as they tell us that these seas are created by our God, that they (and all in them) worship him, and that his love for us is as vast as the ocean!

  • Establish the work

    ,

    Let the favor of the Lord our God be upon us,
    and establish the work of our hands upon us;
    yes, establish the work of our hands!

    Psalm 90:17 ESV

    Establish comes from the Latin word meaning “to make firm” – and as I read this prayer, it resonated deeply with me. It feels like so much of the work I do is ephemeral or fleeting. What is important today is forgotten tomorrow, and even the “good” things I have built are mostly digital, simply 0’s and 1’s that could be erased and never seen again.

    I long to have the work I do make a meaningful impact, or at the very least, not be a total waste of time and effort that could have been better spent. The truth that God will establish our work, he will make it solid and of lasting value, is so encouraging, even when it doesn’t feel significant.

    CS Lewis captured an aspect of this idea well in The Great Divorce, when he pictured the good work we do here on earth reflecting the heavenly truth that is so much better. So yes, our work here is just a reflection, but when done well, it reflects heaven to those around us.

    When you painted on earth – at least in your earlier days – it was because you caught glimpses of Heaven in the earthly landscape. The success of your painting was that it enabled others to see the glimpses too. But here you are having the thing itself.

    CS Lewis, The Great Divorce
  • AI vs Cognitive Gains

    Using ChatGPT to complete assignments is like bringing a forklift into the weight room; you will never improve your cognitive fitness that way.

    Ted Chiang

    The tools we use can easily become crutches that inhibit development and even cause atrophy.

    • Driving vs walking -> health decline
    • Calculators vs mental math -> reliance on calculator
    • GPS vs maps & directions -> reliance on GPS
    • Auto-correct vs spelling yourself -> even poorer speeling

    These tools all have a use and can be beneficial, but they cannot be evaluated apart from their impacts. And they actually impact different groups unequally.

    The first group is those who have already gained the skill or technique, but use the tool to become faster or better. They know the “hard” way because they had to learn it. For them the danger is not progressing in a skill, and even atrophying.

    The second group is those who have never known the skill, but learned with the tool. They have never had the chance to learn the “hard” way, and are stuck without it.

    As we think about AI tools like ChatGPT, for us who’ve already learned to write an essay, or draw a picture, or write code, using AI may mean our skills get rusty, but at worst, we could still get along without them. But for the next generation who have not, they will be hopelessly lost without it, dependent on AI tools – and those who own and program them, to complete the basic tasks in work and life.

    Though these tools are being crammed into every product by the tech firms that dominate our lives, we can choose not to use them, and to keep our human-defining skills like writing and making music and art, even if it means taking longer or thinking harder, that’s the point.

    And for those who are learning, remember that though AI may be able to answer your question or complete your assignment, every time you use this tool you are giving it more control and reducing your future independence.

  • MVP as a Craft

    I love the idea of craftsmanship, the man or woman who has dedicated their life to their craft and continually hones their skills. They are not satisfied with merely completing the job, but outdoing themselves every time.

    Yet, in the world of business startups, it is completely different. We live by the concept of MVP or Minimum Viable Product. You don’t know if the product you are building is something people actually want, so you build the minimum that allows you to test and validate your idea, and then iterate as you learn.

    This philosophy resonates with my personality. I love bringing new ideas to life; software for work, and projects of any kind for fun, including brewing kombucha, gardening, and building wood furniture.

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  • As a Christian, I am called to live a just life in the full sense of the word* – both seeking to do things rightly, and to correct injustice when it is in my power.

    However, if I am not aware of an injustice, especially one that I am somehow part of, does that clear me?

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  • Faith + Work Archive

    In 2017 I started writing a weekly letter to encourage others in their faith and vocation – especially entrepreneurs, based on what God had taught me in my journey.

    Over a year and a half I wrote 70+ letters, covering failure, planning, control, sleep, and more. All the letters are available here.

    These are a few of my favourites:

  • Welcome

    ephemera

    The minor transient documents of everyday life

    Hey there, welcome to my personal place on the web. Somewhere to share digital ephemera I’ve collected over the years that I find interesting, along with quotes, music, and some writing.

    Check out the About page to learn a bit more.