and some other stuff laid out in subjective thoughts from one Polish student of economics
Sunday, 31 March 2019
I have moved in
Finally back in Ursynów and in my own, not rented dwelling. Still getting to grips with the accompanying mess (especially given first guests pay me a visit today in late afternoon), so just signalling I'm alive and doing well (despite tiredness).
Sunday, 24 March 2019
Who’d resolve and let us know – should they stay or should they go
Brexit is definitely a worthwhile topic, yet to compile the note I had
to fight the inner order to shy away from writing dissertations on it. The
reason I am inclined to refrain from having my say is that I am not a sufficiently
diligent observer of the process. Over the recent weeks and especially days I
have kept abreast of the festival of dithering and powerlessness and my major
impression was that if you believe fecklessness is the domain of Poland, take a
glance at the bygone empire whose statesmen cannot handle the Brexit.
Seemingly, the matter is straightforward – the will of the nation
expressed in the referendum in June 2016 has to be brought into life. What
makes things complicated is that the quitting procedure is unprecedented. A
600-page-long agreement has been negotiated with the EU, just the British
parliament has not made up its (collective mind) to back it; deputies keep
arguing for weeks being stuck in a gridlock, leaving bystanders around the
world confused.
The most mind-boggling part of the story is that as Brexit date was
inexorably approaching (before it was deferred by two weeks mere eight days ahead
of deadline) and the no-deal option was looming, few were outspokenly fearing
dismay. Some regulations governing air traffic, transport of goods and people
as well labour market have been enacted, yet, correct me if I am wrong, everyone
potentially harmed by the Brexit has seemed to have been taking it for granted
the no-deal, chaotic scheme would be averted. No-deal Brexit, if it was to come
about as scheduled, i.e. on 29 March 2019, would strike as a bolt from the
blue.
The fortnight given mercifully by the EU to the UK to get its act
together only prolongs the period of wreckful uncertainty. In the meantime, the
concession from the EU has ignited a glimmer of hope among Brexit opponents. A
petition for another referendum has been signed online by nearly five millions,
around a million of people were reported to march yesterday in London, calling for revoking Brexit. Personally I hope firstly that the UK would reserve on its way
towards independence from the EU structures, secondly that the travesty called
Brexit will teach other nations a lesson, what reckless decisions preceded by flawed cost-and-benefit analysis lead to.
The result of the Brexit referendum, just like the victory of Donald
Trump several months later or victory of PiS in parliamentary election in Poland
several months earlier prove… (here I deliberately shut up, however comments
containing ending of the sentence are appreciated).
Sunday, 17 March 2019
Not a CFA charterholder (still Level III passed and no one can take it away from me)
Asked by several people whether I recommend to spend at least 1,000
hours (and some money) to earn CFA designation, I advise them to weigh up their
priorities in life and whether they are ready to sacrifice at least three years
finding time nearly each day to sit diligently for the exam.
I am proud of passing all three levels at first attempts, although I
reminisce the fortnight before Level III as a nightmare, of being statistically
one in seven candidates to have been eligible for the charter. The three-stage
self-study course does not only test your wits (undoubtedly one must to be
smart to grasp intricate concepts and get familiar with 3,000 pages of curriculum
before each exam), but mostly determination and consistency.
In 2015 after handling all formalities I was awarded a charter, which I
used for subsequent two years. For mere 350 USD per year (of which 75 USD goes
to CFA Society Poland) I was entitled to put “, CFA” after my surname and could
brag about being a part of financial world’s elite. My company refused to
refund my the annual dues, saying the CFA qualification was not essential to
perform my job (slap on my face, but shame on the New Factory, not me). I
forked out to CFA Institute seven hundred US dollars in exchange of which I
received their bulletins and participated in a few conferences (entrance to
most of which was free of charge for non-charterholders). In 2017 I made up my
mind to notice benefits much surpass costs and resolved not to pay a single
dollar to CFA Institute. I had to dump my business cards and have them replaced
by new ones, stopped using the CFA title and until now consider that step to be
right.
On Monday I received the message to the right. At first I thought it was
spam and afraid of clicking on the link I ran it via my antivirus programme
whose check confirmed it was safe (BTW a fancy way of communicating via
send-this-file confirms the highest standards CFA Institute abides by).
It turned out to be the second letter from CFA Institute (I do not
recall getting the first one, dated 13 November 2018, since I probably had
considered it a spam, especially if the message had looked like this and
ignored it) in which they sent a print-screen of my LinkedIn profile, where I
was claiming to be holding the CFA designation and threatened to take
disciplinary and other actions against me. I wonder whether their threats to
publish my name are in line with EU’s directive General Data Protection Regulation (in Poland
known as RODO)…
Truth be told, not erasing the CFA designation (I have mended my ways
immediately) was my omission and mistake, so I wrote a remorseful response in
which I contritely apologised for the non-compliance with CFA Institute
standards, they replied they were fine with it.
Topic closed, yet even if one day my present or future employer offered
to pay my annual dues, I would refuse to resume my membership. CFA Institute
looks like a sectarian organisation founded on candidates’ desire to hold a
prestigious certification. I do not want to have the CFA Institute in-crowd to
live lavishly off my back and offering me little in return. Besides, for a few
years they have been working on differentiating the annual dues depending on
geography (350 USD in Wall Street or n Canary Wharf is not the same in terms of
purchasing power as in Warsaw or let alone Kiev where such contribution is more
than a daylight robbery) and they are too slugging to proceed with it. Shame on
them!
Sunday, 10 March 2019
Young and healthy - for how long?
My problems with lumbar spine roughly date back to mid-2016. Around that
time I had an episode of serious aches which I managed to overcome within a few
weeks with a solid dose of exercising. After that I could boast of being in
very good physical health (except for one knee injury in 2017) until late 2018…
The time when I overstrained my lumbar spine were the first weeks of the
remont during which I did a lot to get rid of all stuff left in the flat by the
previous owner with my bare hands (why paying somebody for a work I could do
myself?). In the post-purchase euphoria I carried heavy loads and actually
experienced little pain in my spine (though feeling I was risking an ache, but
on the next day, not one which would keep me company incessantly).
The remont has actually accelerated the inevitable, since I had been
ignoring temporary incidences of pain since more than five years. While doing
several things which cricked my spine (carrying watering can, vacuum cleaning,
bending while cleaning up, sweeping, doing gardening) I experienced the pain
which would go away quickly after finishing a pernicious task. On top, factors
to blame are sedentary lifestyle (I cannot avoid sitting in the office) and bad
habits I am fighting.
While struggling the pains for recent two months, I have learnt I am not
an outlier among healthy population. Horrifyingly, the percentage of people in
their 30s or 40s having serious problems with their spines is enormous. Several
of my workmates have advised me who (doctors, physiotherapists) to consult,
taught exercises to strengthen and stretch several muscles, shared their
methods of coping with pain and how to function (without giving up on essential
activities) not to overreach the spine.
A decade ago I poked fun at my grandma, in her 80s then, who used to sat
around with her neighbours on a bench outside their block of flats and went on
about their illnesses for hours. These days I do the same while being 50 year
younger!!!
I believe soon the life expectancy in developed countries begins to
decline. Despite progress in medicine and technology, societies have to fight
the battle against bad nutrition habits and lack of exercise. My generation was
the last to spend their childhood playing about in the open air, not taking
leaves off sport classes on mass scale and not spending hours staring at their
computers and smartphones. My parents are frailer than my grandparents and I
must claim to be less resilient to civilisation diseases than them. And so my peers
do. Three of my four grandparents passed away at the age of 87, 89 and 92 and
except for the very few months before the decease, all enjoyed good health. My
parents, both 69 now, can gripe much more about their health than my
grandparents who at such age were as fit as a fiddle. After the remont is over
and the nagging pains are relieved, a pursuit of a recovery plan for my health
is due/. I have already booked a fortnight stay at a sanatory where spine
afflictions are cured, which is just a part of the plan, yet its crucial
element.
Oddly enough, the my overall fitness has generally improved in recent
months, meaning my body can tolerate more intensive effort before I get tired
or lose my breath. Sadly, my bones, joints and muscles do not catch up.
Sunday, 3 March 2019
Thrown out
Tuesday
Head of my departments books a flight to Wrocław for Friday (he travels
there in business).
Wednesday evening. A fake meeting with fake agenda, yet real
participants is called for Thursday morning (8 a.m.).
Thursday morning. The head of my department turns up to attend the
meeting and is given a sack with immediate effect (his job contract formally
will be terminated in 3 months with regular notice period at the end of which
he will get a severance package due under an ongoing layoff programme). He
manages to return to his desk and write a farewell e-mail to his subordinates
before his access to computer is cut off. I pass him by while walking to the
office. I am astonished to see him carrying a cardboard box. He thanks me for
good service and seeing me speechless for a while he admits he is equally
surprised.
Being made redundant in a corporation is similar to sudden decease. The
pace of both processes is horrifying and so is the shock afterwards. Recent
goings on in the New Factory bring to mind several waves of layoffs I endured
while at the Employer’s.
On Thursday afternoon a short meeting is called to comment on the
situation. The explanation what the reason behind the move has been does not
hold water. The (former) head of department’s boss tells us the intention was
to reduce number of directors in the division, therefore… the vacancy after him
will be filled shortly. Then, as always in such situations, the team is
instructed to carry on business as usual (adore the phrase which lacks a Polish
equivalent).
With hindsight I realise the dismissed director had not lived up to a
new chief officer’s expectations and a seasoned observed could have noticed
that. Nevertheless, during several talks (face to face and during exchanged of
plenty of phone calls, e-mails and messages) with my workmates I was asked the
question “why”. The official version remains that it was a bolt of the blue (I
would not tell anybody he failed to deliver).
The earthquake is over, now time to pick up the pieces and wait for the
new nomination which is to be announced with days rather than weeks. Despite
having worked in the ruthless industry for nearly a decade, I still feel
disgusted by the style in which wicked corporation reduce headcount and how FTEs disappear
suddenly nearly like in Stalin’s Soviet Union in 1930s.
The payment for the return airplane ticket to Wrocław has not been
recovered by the New Factory.
Good to have the comfort of running the blog anonymously and feeling
free to post such defamatory stories…