Tag: work
-
Trucks At The World’s Largest Truck Stop
1AvaCtSQf1dneuJAZJ1YGpU1dVgbM69Rp9, 1by5, 1×5, 28215×5643, America, automation, blue, blue truck, brown, brown truck, career, diesel, dirty, dirty job, Drive, driver, Duncan Rawlinson Photo, Duncan Rawlinson Photography, employed, employee, employment, fuel, Future, gas, gasoline, haul, heavy, highway, human, inspection, interstate, iowa 80, IQ250, Job, jobless, load, longhaul, occupation, otr, otr driver, pano, panorama, parked, parked trucks, parking, parking lot, people, Phase One, Phase One IQ250, Photo by Duncan Rawlinson, Pump, red, red truck, rig, road, Road Trip 2016, self driving, semi, Shot With A Phase One IQ250, sign, Sky, station, stop, tires, tractor, trailer, transport, transportation, trip, truck, Truck Drivers, truck-stop, trucker, Trucks At The World’s Largest Truck Stop, truckstop, unemployed, unemployment, wheels, work, worker, World’s Largest, World’s Largest Truckstop
-
Truck Driver
I’ve been doing quite a bit of reading and thinking about the future of work. Obviously truck driving is going to be changed when autonomous vehicles take over that job. What I hadn’t realized was the sheer number of truck drivers in the world. There is a staggering number of them. In that vein I decided to stop at the “World’s Largest Truckstop” on my last photography trip to learn more.
As I was wandering around making photographs this gentleman approached me. He said “Hey, can you make any money doing that?” referring to photography. I said if you work hard enough and long enough maybe, just maybe you can make a little money. He told me he was a truck driver and that he was thinking about taking up photography. He’d been “making a little bit of money” making YouTube slideshows of photography. I told him to email me and we could continue the conversation online. He’s holding my card in his hand in this photograph. When I asked if I could take a photo of him he decided to pose like this. I guess he wanted to look tough. He never got in touch.
1FTkWhQYdafq2KAdFdSyhXuK8qGXK9pW8W, cross, Duncan Rawlinson Photo, Duncan Rawlinson Photography, employment, headphones, IQ250, jobs, Phase One, Phase One IQ250, Photo by Duncan Rawlinson, red truck, Road Trip 2016, Shot With A Phase One IQ250, the future, the future of work, Truck Driver, Trucking Industry, work, young man
-
Working Together
1Hcv8vK1Nyp3CR2bKZvdFcmnAntQSmPN4q, 5D MK III, 5DMKIII, black wire, Canada, Canon, Canon EOS 5D Mark 3, Canon EOS 5D Mark III, collaborate, collaboration, complex, complexity, complicated, Duncan Rawlinson Photography, empire sandy, employment, engineer, engineering, engineers, gloves, green wire, GTAA, hart-well, helmets, knot, maple leaf helmet, Marina Quay West, mess, mess of wires, on, Ontario, Photo by Duncan Rawlinson, Photowalk, Photowalking, Photowalking Toronto, problem solving, reflective vests, Taken with Canon EOS 5D Mark III, tangle, tangled, Toronto, Toronto Ontario Canada, tulips, Waterfront Toronto, Waterfront Trail Toronto, work, work boots, workers, working, working together, workman
-
Working from home
1000 Islands, 2011, Canada, computer, desk, Duncan Rawlinson Photography, gtd, Hill Island, imac, June, June 2011, office, Ontario, Photo by Duncan Rawlinson, WFH, work, work from home
-
Counterintuitive: Start Your Day On A Hill
Here is something you can do to really kickstart your workday. Start each day on a downward slopping hill. A metaphorical downward hill that is.
Stopping a task at an arbitrarily defined time like 5PM really makes no sense. Try stopping your task on or shortly after the point you’re most excited about it. One would think if you’re excited about something you should continue working on it until the excitement wanes. This is great if you can complete the task in sitting. If the task takes you into another day you may want to consider quitting while you’re ahead.
The whole point of this is that it takes an incredible effort to get back to that level of energy and excitement the next time day. Sometimes generating that kind of interest is just too much to ask early in the morning. So we allow the distractions to take over. Like processing email. In other words procrastinating with something that feels productive but is really just busy work.
Stop when you find yourself totally motivated and pumped up. Move onto the next item and get that task rolling.
When you start your next day you’ll be excited to get back to the first task where you left off. Ideally if you stagger your tasks like this it will never feel like a chore to get going, and you’ll be a ninja on startup every day.
Update: 4314 days after I originally posted this I learned about something called the Zeigarnik Effect which basically explains this phenomenon.
The Zeigarnik Effect is a psychological phenomenon in which people remember uncompleted or interrupted tasks better than completed tasks. It is named after Russian psychologist Bluma Zeigarnik, who first described the effect in 1927. The effect has been used to explain why people often have difficulty forgetting unfinished tasks and why people often feel compelled to finish tasks that they have started.
-
Two Girls Using Computers Lisbon Lounge Hostel
alone, April 2010, art, caricatures, chairs, door, EF17-40mm f/4L USM, floor, home, hostel, internet, isolated, isolation, isolation of technology, laptop, Lisboa, lisbon, lonely, mat, paint, photograph, portugal, tech, Technology, Travel, Travellers, travelling, wall, wallart, wallpaper, Web, windows, work
-
Worker Painting The Eiffel Tower
April 2010, Eiffel, eiffel tower, france, man, manatwork, paris, photo, photo by @thelastminute, Photo by Duncan Rawlinson, photograph, Sky, The Eiffel Tower, thelastminute, Tour Eiffel, tower, work
-
Flower made of Grass
April 2010, art, artwork, EF50mm f/1.4 USM, Flower, france, grass, heart, paris, photo, photo by @thelastminute, Photo by Duncan Rawlinson, photograph, thelastminute, wall, work
-
men working on 1000 islands bridge
1000, 1000 islands bridge, 1000islands, bridge, bridge workers, Canada, cottage, Dad and Duncs, Hill Island, islands, men, men working, Ontario, photo, photo by @thelastminute, Photo by Duncan Rawlinson, thecottage, thelastminute, work, working