The Five-Stack That Stuck

Everyone needs a hobby. Something that they can do after work to de-stress and bring joy into days that would otherwise be bland and dull. For me, that hobby is Dota 2, a competitive online multiplayer game. My fondest memories of the game came from my first few years of play, between 2013 and 2015. I dipped my toe into a new gaming world, found new friends, deepened otherwise shallow relationships, and even grew closer to the person who would later become my wife. All throughout, we experienced the wonder of playing on the same team, trying to win our digital battles.

I had grown up as almost the stereotype of a young white male in South Africa. While my family was firmly middle-class, I had been fortunate enough to attend one of the top schools in the country. I had graduated with results that could get me into any university that I wanted. I even completed a year of A-levels to study in the UK, before realizing how ludicrously expensive that would be. So, in 2010, I enrolled at the most well-regarded university in my city in a Commerce degree, majoring in Law and Economics. I found solid friends through the university’s nerd society – even being elected their president for a year. In mid-2012, I met a young woman named Kristen, fell in love instantly, and we began to date soon afterwards. Everything was rosy, apart from my second-year Economics results. I had failed the course in 2011, and was on the road to doing so again. After looking around during a third-year class, I realized that I disliked everyone in the room, the lecturer included. I promptly changed my major from Economics to Psychology, and my degree from Commerce to Arts. The path that had been set before me was shifting, and my concept of who I was, was in flux. The entirety of my 2013 would be spent catching up on Psychology units and questioning whether I had made the right choice.

At the beginning of the year, I heard about Dota 2 for the first time. I saw people playing it at a gaming event at the university, and I was intrigued by it. Dota 2 is a game based on DotA, a popular mod to Blizzard’s Warcraft 3. Players are divided into two teams of five, with each player controlling one hero each. Players can choose from over 120 heroes, each with unique abilities, strengths, and weaknesses. Players aim to get gold, which they use to buy items, and experience, which can make their character more powerful by levelling up. Teams work together to take the advantage in gold and experience from across the game map, with the final goal being to destroy the enemy Ancient, a towering building in the centre of their base. Once a team’s Ancient is destroyed, they lose the game. Games are generally between 30 and 60 minutes long, with shorter and longer games possible depending on the specific heroes that are chosen in the game. Dota 2 is a game of back-and-forth, trying to outwit your opponents. Your team needs to get more gold and experience than your opposition, and use your hero’s abilities to kill your enemies and destroy their Ancient.

As Dota 2 is a team game, the fact that I attempted to do all of this entirely by myself for my first few weeks of playing made my initial experiences much more confusing and challenging than they ever ought to have been. I had played the original DotA a decent amount in computer class in high school (yes, during the class – our poor computer class teacher was too nice to handle a room of 17-year-old boys), so I was familiar with the basic idea of the game, a good portion of the heroes, and some of the strategy. However, I was entirely new to the interface, and as someone who hadn’t played any team-based video games growing up, working together with strangers in a digital space was not a skill that I had yet acquired. Nevertheless, I persisted. The gameplay loop was immensely satisfying to me. Every game, I would start out weak and poor. I would then gradually build myself up. The game would go through tense periods where it could go either way, until one team won a definitive teamfight (where all members of the two teams clash, abilities fly, and one team generally ends up with fewer people dead than the other team). Then, the game would end with an Ancient blasting apart with a satisfying explosion. I was hooked.

I began to mention my appreciation for the game to anyone that I thought would have a vague interest in it, in the hope that we could play together. I raved about it to the members of my family of gaming age. I debated its merits at length with members of the university nerd club. I even got into a conversation about it with Sean, one of my opponents at a Magic: the Gathering tournament. I met Sean at a previous tournament. We’d had some polite banter then, so I struck up a conversation with him again. We talked about which video games we were currently playing, and I told him of my new obsession with Dota 2. He mentioned that he and a couple of his friends played occasionally. My eyes lit up, less in an endearing and hopeful way, and more in the manner of a man possessed by a mischievous imp. We exchanged our in-game information, and promised to meet up online in the following week. Thus, the seed for the stack was born.

In online gaming, a stack is the group of players that you queue together to play the game with. I had, up until this point, been playing in a stack entirely by myself. Not a very large or effective stack at all. The following week, Sean messaged me via Steam (the client that Dota 2 is launched through) and told me that his stack was getting together at his home that coming Friday to have an evening of Dota 2, and he asked if I’d like to join them. I tried my best to express my enthusiasm like a normal human being and not a feral animal. I’m not entirely sure that I succeeded, but Sean and the rest of the stack accepted me into their fold anyway.

When Friday came, I was nervous. I had played about two hundred games in my two months of experience with the game, but looking at the profiles of the people I would be joining, my achievements weren’t very impressive at all. Sean had played more than double the number of games, and he hadn’t even played the most. I pulled up to his driveway, was let through the gate, and I sat in the driveway for a moment, gathering my courage. I had met everyone before at Magic: the Gathering events, but I felt like this was a different arena, one where I was much less knowledgeable. I stepped out, laptop bag hanging over my left shoulder, and went into Sean’s house with the weight of nerves more than equalling that of the bag.

I was greeted by Sean. He is a large and gentle man with a warm smile. He talks in bursts, building up his confidence to express his opinions as fast and clearly as he can. Next I saw Richard. I had known him the longest. At the time, he was dating a good friend of mine, and we’d had a couple of prior conversations. Richard was even quieter than Sean, and equally as warm-hearted. His lanky build and unassuming demeanour helped ease me into the group. The final member was Duncan, who came in from the back porch after having a smoke. Duncan’s deep voice seemed at odds with his thin frame, but suited his philosophical nature perfectly. He greeted me with a chuckle and a firm handshake. I set up my laptop at the end of the long table. We all logged in and started queueing for a game. The next thing we knew, it was three in the morning, we had played five games together, and had the first of many nights of Dota 2 as a group. Too tired to drive home, Duncan, Richard, and I spent that night at Sean’s. We discussed the games we’d played and the most hilarious moments therein, and bid each other goodnight. We enjoyed the time so much, we played two more games the next day, even though we all had university deadlines pressing.

After that first meeting of our stack, our midweek games of Dota 2 would almost always involve at least two of us. Sean and I played together most often, with the others joining us when they could. We bonded over the sheer hours we would spend in contact, forming a friendship through text messages. We would give each other shit for stupid things we did in-game, share the latest strategies from the professional scene, and bask in victories that we definitely earned (and were not based in luck at all). When game talk was exhausted, we’d talk about life, our anxieties, and learn more about each other. Occasionally, we’d all get together for another evening of the Dotes (as we called it), have some drinks, and have even more fun.

During this time, my girlfriend Kristen grew increasingly frustrated with Dota 2. We lived about twenty minutes away from each other, and we saw each other every day. While I never started a game of Dotes while she was visiting, she would sometimes arrive at my house and I was in the middle of a game I had to finish. It never took more than twenty minutes or so, but claims of “Sorry love, I’m almost done!” happened enough to irk her. After one such claim, she sat down and decreed:

“Alright. I know that you really enjoy Dota. I understand that. I’ve tried to make sense of it while watching you as you’re playing. I know, I know, it’s hard to explain while you’re playing, that’s fine. Now. Here is what’s going to happen: I want to try learn Dota. I’d like you to teach me. If I end up liking it, then we can play together, which is much better than me waiting around for you to finish a game. If I don’t, you stop playing for good. I just can’t take it anymore, I’m sorry.”

I sat stunned for a moment. I loved Kristen, and had done from the moment I first met her. She was definitely way out of my league. She was far more beautiful and an infinitely better person than I deserved (she still is). As such, I agreed to her terms. I would be her coach as she learned the game. It is said that Dota 2 has one of the biggest learning curves in all of gaming, and I would be the one to show her the easiest path upward. I started by going through all of the heroes, telling her a bit about their backstory, and giving her a basic idea of what they could do. From there, she picked a handful that she wanted to use to learn, and I would sit behind her as she played, encouraging her and explaining the game mechanics. I could see the spark beginning to glint in her eyes. Soon, we were playing side-by-side, winning and losing together. Through her determination to try something I loved, we had gained a hobby that we could share, and we were both overjoyed. She liked playing strong female characters and styling on all the men, and I just loved doing anything with her, including playing Dotes.

In Kris’ training period, she had met the rest of the stack, now affectionately known as ‘the lads’, in-game. She had played a good deal with Sean and I, and with Richard and Duncan a handful of times. In order to improve relations, Sean decided to host another evening at his house, with Kris filling the as-yet-empty fifth slot in our stack. She was even more nervous than I was at my first evening. She perceived our gatherings as guy’s nights, where no women were allowed. She imagined us gathered round a fireplace smoking pipes and indulging in some jolly old digital escapism. Meeting everyone in person helped alleviate the tension. She saw that we all wanted her to be there, and we tried our best to make her feel like a true part of the stack, one of the lads. While she did not immediately take to the rest of the group like I had, within a couple of weeks playing together, we were a tight-knit group. She was soon yelling, throwing shade, and bantering with the best of us.

We revelled in each other’s company for over a year. We would get together once every few months, but meet up online at least once a week. Sean, Kris and I played together most often. We branched our friendship beyond Dotes, into board games and braais (a South African pastime similar to the American barbecue but superior in almost every way). The members of the stack were among the friends that I interacted with the most during that time of my life, all because of the hours we spent together trying to best the other team.

As inevitable as the fact that we couldn’t win every game was the realization that life would eventually pull us apart. In the beginning of 2015, Kris and I moved to South Korea for a year of teaching that turned into four years and counting. Rich moved to Australia, and Sean and Duncan graduated university and found jobs in their respective fields. The delay in the game between South Korea and South Africa proved unplayable, even with South Korea’s gloriously fast internet. We may not play together anymore, but I hold our times together as some of the fondest memories from those years. When Kris and I got married in 2017, we invited our stack, as they had invited us years before. Kris and I still play the Dotes almost every weeknight. We have had other, smaller stacks since, but nothing comparable to the one we had with Sean, Duncan, and Rich. There is yet to be a stack greater than the lads and the lady.

Someone once told me that friendships from a person’s school and university years are distinctly different from those formed in the years following, for the simple reason that the person spends significantly more time with school and university friends. Early friendships grow based on sheer masses of hours and days spent interacting with a person or group of people. When you have a job, you find fast friends all around, connecting and declaring friendship in moments rather than months. Time with friends has to be stolen from afternoons and evenings where you aren’t working, sleeping, eating, or working overtime.

It is this need for extra time with friends that I feel games like Dota 2 have helped with. It is mind-bogglingly difficult to arrange to meet up with a friend, particularly if they live in a different city or even on the other side of your own city. Many adult anxieties revolve around making plans with people. However, it is far easier to simply see that your friend is online in a game’s launcher, shoot them a simple ‘hey, wanna play a game or two?’, connect on voice chat, and catch up while destroying the enemy or being destroyed by them.

I have continued to use games as a means of connecting with people ever since I saw the potential through playing Dota 2. I use board games as my medium of choice these days, mostly because they are easier to teach than Dota 2, and are currently more in vogue. When I do find the rare people who either know the Dotes or are willing to learn it, I latch on to them quickly and fervently, and play together as often as possible. Living as an expat in South Korea means getting used to a cycle of people coming and going, and playing games together is one of the best ways that I’ve found to maximize connection in the often short period of time that we spend in the same country.

I’ve found Dota 2 the easiest and most effective way to build up time with a person. The game provides conversation starters, as you can talk about what’s happening in each game, their favourite heroes, or, if they are particularly interested, the professional matches going on at the time. There is ample time during the game to chat, as there are natural downtimes where both teams are simply acquiring gold or experience, and not teamfighting. There are also action-packed moments to fill what would otherwise be dead, awkward air between people who are getting to know each other. Even though Kris and I haven’t had a reliable stack of five people since we left South Africa, we have had many evenings making new friends or catching up with old ones over a few games of Dota 2.


Forging and maintaining friendships as an adult is a struggle shared by many people in the modern world. As a more introverted person, it is even more difficult for me, as activities like going out to a random bar and talking to strangers sounds like the opposite of how I would like to spend my time. I was fortunate to find Dota 2, an online gaming means to bond with others. It has helped me blossom relationships that would otherwise have wilted into awkwardness and disconnection. It has become a pastime that my wife and I have shared for thousands of hours at this point. It has been an escape for me when I needed one. Some might say that I am addicted, and they might be right, but when I reminisce about the moments I’ve shared with those I’ve been lucky enough to game with, I can’t help but feel love for the game.

The International 6: Everyone is a fan at heart

It’s been over a month since Kris and I attended the latest iteration of the biggest event in Dota 2 -The International 6. For one week, we were at the beating, bleeding heart of the game that we have spent thousands of hours playing, watching, learning, and loving. For most of the world, it was just another week, another stream on Twitch. Another event for gamers to make small talk about for a while. For us, it was a week that we’ve been dreaming about for years – a true nerdy dream come true.

From the moment that Kris and I first realized that we could attend TI6 and booked our tickets, I honestly had trouble processing that we were ACTUALLY GOING TO TI. For weeks, I caught myself thinking ‘Only 3 months until you’re going to TI’. It’s tough to describe in words what it felt like to even contemplate going to go and see players that I had been following for years.

With about a week to go, this hype elevated to another level. The crew head of GosuGamers (a gaming site that I have written for since last year) asked me to be the official interviewer for the site for the event. I was given press access to the whole event (meaning I went for free, and quickly sold my pre-bought tickets), and details about the press day that would happen the weekend before TI itself. I was actually going to meet the players. Talk to them. Try not to make jokes that were too bad.

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Yeah, that’s a calm face. Totally. 

Before we knew it, the press day was upon us. A Saturday morning and early afternoon spent conversing about the game I love with the players I may or may not have significant feelings for. Or, to be more precise, to spend an hour too scared shitless and nervous to actually talk to anyone, before proceeding to actually be an effective(ish) interviewer for the rest of the time. I managed to interview AdmiralBulldog (a favourite player of Kris and I), Raven, GeNeral, Shadow, Ohaiyo, and the entire team of Escape Gaming, which was split up into two videos (qojqva and syNdereN and Khezu, Yapz0r and Era). I was incredibly nervous for most of the time, shown by my repeated head-bobbing (I look like my neck isn’t quite working properly).

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Just chillin’ with the Admiral.

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The face of a happy fangirl.

Despite my nerves, this day was arguably my favourite day of the entire tournament. Sure, we would see some sick plays and meet the community over the course of the following week. But in terms of level of dream achievement, I don’t think it got better than the press day for me. I was in Seattle, interviewing players, and writing pieces and doing videos about them. I have never felt more legitimate in the eSports world yet. Kris even dipped her toe into eSports journalism, writing a well-received piece on the cosplayers of TI6.

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TI6 cosplay was incredible. Neither of these costumes were judged good enough to win.

While the press day may have been the high point in terms of personal legitimacy, the rest of TI certainly made my inner fanboy happy on an almost continuous basis. From being able to easily look from the screen where the action was taking place to their agonizing faces in the team booths, to obtaining piles of merchandise, to new heroes (yes, more than one!) being revealed and teased, to the overall high production value of the event, I almost constantly had a smile on my face more prominent than the pain in my neck from looking up at the screen for hours at a time.

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Our view of teh action for the week.

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Where the magic happened.

What I was struck by most at the main event was the community. Even though we were sitting with press, everyone seemed to just be there for the love of the game itself. Sure, they would feverishly write pieces during the action, but when there was a crucial play, bad decision, or upset, there would not be a person in Key Arena not watching. Some of my favourite moments were just sitting with some of the friends we made, talking about our lives, Dota, and how we were hoping to get one of the rare drops that occurred only for people in the stadium. The entirety of Key Arena was a true community, united in its love for Dota 2.

This sense of community extended to the players and personalities themselves. There were constant photo sessions, where us plebs could meet and take a photo with our favourite members of the community, from players to casters to hosts. We ony managed to get to one of these sessions, with Troels ‘syNdereN’ Nielsen.

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Kris and Troels.

Troels plays for Escape Gaming, and he is the player that got me interested in Dota 2. I played Dota 1 back in high school, but left it behind me when I went to university. After a couple of years, I found out about Dota 2, and was playing it casually. Then I discovered Troels’ stream of the game. I watched him whenever I could, and loved that I could watch and learn from one of the best in the world. It helps that he was funny and, as I would discover on the press day and autograph session, an incredibly nice, warm guy. Only that kind of person would agree to the glorious photo that is the header image of this piece.

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Even outside of the assigned sessions, personalities were all very approachable. You could walk up to them while they were wandering the arena, and if they were free, they would happily talk to you and share some of their time. It warmed my heart that even though they were famous in the community, they didn’t see themselves as above everyone else. They earnestly thanked you for any kind words or stories you would share. They offered of themselves, both in time and energy.

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Two beautiful ladies and a shlub in pink pants.

From interviewing to watching to prowling the arena looking to snag a photo with someone you know and love, TI6 was truly a dream weekend. Kris and I saw some of the best Dota 2 we’ve ever seen. We made friends that we will hopefully keep in touch with for years to come (even though I am terrible at social media). We met our idols. All in all, TI6 was a week of happiness that I will carry with me for the rest of my life. Can we go back yet?

Winter Battle Pass: Our Lunar New Year Present

For those who are new to the blog, or do not otherwise know, Kris and I are pretty much nuts for the computer game that is Dota 2. Whilst some of our colleagues and Ultimate friends have been doing things as extravagant as going skiing and visiting other countries, we have spent the majority of our holiday in our apartment fervently playing as many games of Dota 2 as possible. A large reason for this is a recent piece of content that was released for the game: the Winter Battle Pass.

As is evident from the name, the Winter Battle Pass is a temporary addition to the game, lasting only for the season of winter. There have been similar content to the Battle Pass that have been released for the past few seasons, but none have been as well-received by the community.

Essentially, the Winter Battle Pass costs $8, and gives the player access to content that is unique to holders of the pass. Unlike other games that hold significant content behind a paywall, the Winter Battle Pass does not in any way affect a player’s chances to win the game by altering stats or adding new playable characters or the like. All of the heroes in Dota are available to every player, and the only thing differentiating a person who is just learning the game and someone who has played for years is the knowledge and skills that the player picks up by playing. So, what does the Winter Battle Pass offer to the players of the otherwise free-to-play game in return for their money? Hats. Sweet, sweet hats.

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Sometimes bears just want to be cowboys (this set was eventually removed from the store for violating the core aesthetic of the hero)

Whilst no amount of money can give you an in-game advantage, it can buy you cosmetic items to make your hero look cooler, prettier, or of a different style. The Winter Battle Pass allows players to complete in-game quests in the attempt to gain levels and, thereby, hats. Previous incarnations of the Battle Pass idea have been far less well-received, as they were a little more money-grabby and a little less sensitive to what the community wanted. The hats-to-money ratio was out of whack. But the current Battle Pass has struck the right balance between keeping Valve’s investors happy and the community playing as many games as possible in order to complete their challenges.

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The pass has been so successful that the average number of players at any one time has risen over 2.5% since the Pass came out. At the peak time in the last month, there have been more than 1.1 million people playing Dota at one time, almost equalling the record numbers for the game from last year in March. Whilst this may not be anywhere near the numbers flaunted by Dota’s main competitor, League of Legends, the growth is encouraging.

So, Kris and I have been holed up in our little apartment, playing game after game in our hunt for pretty hats. I have raged a little, leading to a small domestic dispute, but I have promised to be better. We stopped. Then we started again. Because hats.

7 Weeks, 7 Lessons

On the 29th of February, Kris and I will finish our first year-long teaching contract in Korea. I cannot believe that time has flown by so fast. It seems like only a few weeks ago when we stepped off of the plane and were swept into an ominous black taxicab. We feel like we’ve known some of our friends here for many years already. And yet, it still feels like we are incredibly new to both teaching and Korea in general. With only seven weeks remaining until we leave Dongtan and start the next chapter of our adventure, here are seven things I have learned in my time in Korea so far.

1.) No matter how far away from each other you are, family and friends stay together. Whether we have brief discussions and catch-up sessions via Skype, post meaningless links to each other on Facebook, or get together on grand trips to Australia, it is very easy to keep in touch with one’s family and friends.

2.) Moving away teaches you who your true friends are. It is very easy to maintain friendships when those who you feel are close to you are within close proximity. When you are on the other side of the world, with a time difference of seven hours, and plans need to be made to communicate, it reveals who is willing to take the effort to do so. Some people you chat to on a constant basis. Others you don’t even need to do that much.

3.) Non-verbal communication is extremely powerful. You are trying to buy an incredibly necessary item. The shopkeeper and yourself do not share a common language. You awkwardly flail your hands in what you hope is close enough to an accurate depiction of your necessity. The shopkeeper smiles eagerly. They take you to something completely opposite to what you intended. You wince, smile nervously, and try again until you get it correct. Moments like that help you observe that communication goes so much further than words.

4.) Cleaning cat litter on a daily basis is far cleaner and easier than doing so on a weekly basis. Not to mention cleaner, quicker, and far less smelly.

5.) Coming home and trying to write (or otherwise pursue ones hobbies) is tiring, but rewarding. After nine hours of herding small children in the general direction of education, the idea of performing actions that require further effort is not a pleasant one in the slightest. However, I have produced some of my best work (including the majority of these blog posts) in the evenings after teaching. Sometimes, you just have to do what has to be done. It is worth it in the end.

6.) Cats like nothing more than destroying things. In the time that we have played housekeeper to our two lovely furry babies, our apartment has taken a bit of a beating. They have clawed much of the upholstery. They have removed a panel from underneath the sink. They have scratched the side of our wooden cupboard in their constant jumping atop of it. And they have looked adorable throughout all of it. Annoyingly so.

7.) Things that would be impossible alone are within your reach if you have good support. Neither Kristen nor myself would be here without each other. I would never have gathered the motivation to complete all of the admin necessary to reach Korea. Kristen would have left within the first month without my moral support. I would not have had the courage to move to part-time employment (to focus on my writing and Dota-related endeavours) without Kristen’s reassurances. Together, we are far stronger than we are alone.

I have grown more in this year than I have in a long while. It has not been easy, but with Kristen’s help, I have managed to try and follow my dreams. In the coming months, my pursuit of Internet notoriety will intensify. For now, I am trying to savour the last few days with my current children. They aren’t making it easy – they’re being particularly rowdy and disruptive – but time is passing faster than ever. I can’t wait to see what the future will hold.

Stretched Thin

This week was another week of upturns in the outlook of our school. Several new children began class in the kindergarten section, two of which landed in my class. While this may be good for the school, it will remain to be seen whether it is good for my sanity and the dynamic within the class. On Friday I felt more tired than I had been in a long while. Having to get up and do writing yesterday felt like more of a chore than it had ever been. I have even neglected this blog for longer than I have ever done. Here’s hoping that this is not a sign for the weeks to come – I don’t want to feel completely drained of any will to do things outside of teaching.

The first new student in my class arrived on Thursday. At first, he was remarkably shy, but after a few lessons he perked up, and proved himself to be intelligent and good at almost all aspects of schooling. His writing is neat, he works well, and his phonics and grammar are up amongst the best in the class. I can see some problems coming in the future, as he is a very high-energy child who is quickly bored and does not handle boredom well. I will have to up my game when it comes to providing activities in the classroom.

The second new child arrived on Friday morning. A girl this time, she was, like the first new boy, quite shy at first. After the first lesson, she had not said anything apart from her name. The other children were even asking if she could speak. As the day wore on, she perked up a little. Her level of English is not as good as the new boy’s, but it is within the realm of possibility for their age and level of exposure to English. She tends to use Korean a fair amount and seems to require a lot of attention from me. Perhaps this will change when she bonds with the rest of the class.

Managing five children is far more tiring than managing three. Whereas I previously could trust at least one student to be able to complete the tasks that I give to them by themselves and bounce between the other two children, this will no longer be sufficient. I will have to adapt my style of teaching to better deal with the challenges of having a bigger class. Doing so is exhausting.

I woke up at 09h30 yesterday and 10h00 today, far later than I normally do, even on the weekend. Following this, I elected to laze in bed rather than do things such as writing (this blog and freelance writing) or casting. I feel a little disappointed in myself that I neglected these responsibilities. While teaching is my job for now, these activities are my avenues for the future, and I must be careful not to let the road become dusty from lack of travel. I have far to go in all of these, and not taking a few steps now may prove to be a big stumbling point in the future.

I did end up writing three articles yesterday and this post today, so it is not all doom and gloom. Apart from that, I played Dota and BioShock, watched Downton Abbey and Rick and Morty, and generally had a relaxing weekend. It was made less enjoyable by the clouds of not having done things and school on Monday hanging over it all, but it has been an enjoyable weekend nonetheless.

Now please excuse me while I enjoy the last few hours of it. How will I spend it? Hopefully with a combination of productivity and merriment. Most importantly, it will be spent with Kristen, and that is more than enough cause for me to keep smiling for the rest of the day.

All in Time

I have a good ear for timing in music. This arose largely because I hardly ever practiced the tuba, my main instrument, outside of official rehearsals. This meant I had to be able to precisely time when I came in. If I messed up my timing, the entire song would be ruined by a single loud FWARP. I used to adopt a similar approach in life, waiting for the precisely correct moment to complete a particular task. This usually meant doing things at the last minute.

I procrastinate. It used to be one of the defining characteristics of who I was. At university, I would leave assignments until the point at which no normal human should be able to churn out whatever word count was necessary. Teaching and managing my activities outside of teaching has helped me reign in the desire to just do it tomorrow. Now, most of the time, I’m just doing it.

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Insert obligatory meme here

I am teaching for 9 hours of my day. Last week, we had open class to prepare for and deliver, two major tests to administer, and submission deadlines for material for next month’s classes. When I get home, I often make dinner. Most days, I write a freelance writing piece and/or a piece for GosuGamers. This past week was particularly intense in terms of this. I submitted one large piece of freelance writing (2000 words is large, okay), stayed up until at least 3am on Friday and Saturday to cover the past Dota Major for Gosu and spend 3 hours casting my first competitive Dota series in a long while.

After I managed to get all of these things done, not missing a single deadline, I spent the majority of Sunday…procrastinating. I had one last deadline for Sunday, and I spent it watching Downton Abbey, playing Dota, and Skyping an old friend. You know what they say about old habits. I still didn’t miss the deadline, though.

While some of these projects yield more immediate rewards, like being paid money to write as a freelancer, others are more long-term investments. Writing for GosuGamers builds up my network within the Dota community. I hope to one day use some of these connections to fast-track my casting career. Either that, or be offered a paid job for the site. To be honest, I could think of little better than sitting and writing about the game that I love and actually getting paid for it.

All of these endeavours make me realize that I have become far less lackadaisical about what I want to do with life. I want to write. I want to have the game that is my passion, Dota, involved. I don’t want to be wrangling small children for 9 hours a day. It’s not bad work, don’t get me wrong. I just know it’s not really for me. Maybe next year I will work with older children, and I will find that far more stimulating.

For now, I will continue to fill my after-work hours with a fine balance between work, Dota-related endeavours, and procrastination. And I could think of nothing better. I hope that you all find your time signature. I can’t say I’ve found mine yet. All I’ve done is started to listen to my own song a little closer.