As the story unfolds, so the character of our hero, Jimbo, emerges. Two
facts that become clear are that he attended George Heriot’s, an iconic
Edinburgh school, and has a passion for engineering. Recognising this,
and leveraging my own professional journey, I composed a piece for the
Herioter Hub, a site used by former pupils, teachers, and parents:
“I
have noticed even people who claim everything is predestined, and that
we can do nothing to change it, look before they cross the road.” One of
Stephen Hawking’s many insights.
Fortunately, we can make
choices so all have opportunities to contribute in ways large and small,
making our communities kinder, our society more productive and
wealthier, and safeguarding the future of our environment. These goals
need not be contradictory.
My route, a while ago now, was to
become an engineer. To be clear, a Chartered Engineer, as opposed to the
technician who services your gas boiler. Engineers are the men and
women designing better heat pumps to supersede fossil-fuelled boilers.
Or in my case, developing and building point defence systems to protect
Royal Navy vessels, supervising the fabrication of antennas that brought
colour television to the Falkland Islanders, directing software
projects that provided training simulators for the Hong Kong metro, and
building a USD 200 million precision machining plant in Nanjing, China.
An instance from each of four decades. I’ve many more examples but time
flies.
Chances I took to make a mark and try leaving the world a
little better than when my life began. Certainly, challenges along the
way: late nights, long flights, demanding customers, even more demanding
shareholders, and sometimes stressed colleagues. On the other hand, great satisfaction, laughter, and enormous fun.
My
fulfilment is such that as I near the finish line, it seemed time to
share the modest wisdom accumulated along the way. Not through a
ponderous memoir, though. I’ve written a sci-fi novel, now published,
with two more to follow. Look out for Jimbo, an engineer and a fellow
Herioter.
Life is there to be grasped. Make a difference. Become
an Engineer. Use your excellent brain. Cogito, ergo sum, as a very
clever guy once concluded.
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