30 Before 30: The List

I am ambitious. I also like lists.

When life threatened me with the prospect of turning 30 I considered my options. I’ve been lucky in my life and I’ve taken most of the opportunities I’ve spotted. Not just sure-fire opportunities I should add. I enjoy rolling the dice on my life, believing that and in general when it comes to regrets, in-action – not kissing that girl, not going on that weekend away- is worse than those actions that didn’t go as advertised.

I’ve been lucky enough to be in a position where I can go forward creating my own luck. So, its in-keeping with my character that I’d try something like this.

30 before 30. A list of goals to achieve before finishing my third decade, written on my 29th birthday. So how would I go about it? And what would I actually put on the list?

I’ve tried to keep these goals personal and somewhat achievable. Ask the internet about what you should put on these lists and it’ll mostly give you travel advice, book recommendations and cooking recipes. Yes, these made it on. On the other hand some advice is terrible. You won’t find “get married” or “have a child” on this list because to set a deadline on things like that is something I don’t this is at all appropriate.

So here is what I ended up with. They’re not in order:

  1. Meet my niece  (Completed Dec 17 2018: Meeting Ianthe)
  2. Visit 20 different countries (life total) (Completed Jan 7 2019: Ranking my experiences in 20 countries part one \ part two)
  3. Feel confident in Spanish
  4. Visit 3 new places in Bolivia
  5. Jump off/out of something big
  6. Run a 45-minute 10k
  7. Own a decent bike and use it semi-regularly
  8. Go on a long horse ride
  9. Play a set of 7 songs in Spanish at one of my gig nights
  10. Translate one of my own songs into Spanish and play it at no.9
  11. Learn the acoustic version of “Big Love” on guitar
  12. Sing “Cult of Personality” as loud as possible onstage with a band
  13. Read and understand Lorca’s “Bodas de Sangre”, “Yerma” and “The Casa de Bernada Alba” in Spanish
  14. Take 10 book recommendations and read them
  15. Read all of “The Idiot”. Not just the first 250 pages like I normally do
  16. Watch and have an opinion on every movie from a reputable “Top 50 movies of all time” list
  17. Listen to and have an opinion on every album from a reputable “Top 50 albums of all time” list
  18. Complete Zelda: Breath of the Wild
  19. Find a new hobby
  20. Reach a goal within that hobby
  21. Learn to cook 3 dishes reasonably well
  22. Go vegan for a month     (Completed 1 Sept 2018: What I learned)
  23. Own a plot of land           (Completed 4 Sept 2018: 500m2 of Potential)
  24. Plant half a dozen trees   (Completed 13 Oct 2018: Life on Life)
  25. Decorate my room, including one item that I made myself
  26. Do an ancestry test
  27. Try, and succeed, an escape room
  28. Get a tattoo
  29. Write and publish educational material for Language Connection (my business)
  30. Learn to do various little things that everyone should be able to do, but you somehow haven’t learned yet because you shied away from it as a child

Most of these need a bit of explanation, and some are definitely easier than others. Some could be done in a day, others take several stages of planning and execution. For the sake of brevity I haven’t added all the caveats that make these successes or not, but they do exist if any scrupulous eyes are reading.

Mostly, these goals are about the attempt and not the success. Maybe I’ll hit all 30, maybe I won’t; but it should be fun finding out. I want to set out with the idea that this is all achievable and so the target is very much 30 before 30. This blog should help me hold myself to account, and knowing that someone might be reading this should also be good motivation.

A couple of close friends of mine have talked about lists for their 29th birthdays after hearing me harp on about it so much so if you, reader, are doing or thinking of doing anything similar- hit me up.

Wish me luck!

你是我的菜. 谢谢!

China is easy to like and difficult to love.

It wasn’t until the home stretch of my 一年多 that I decided I wasn’t just being impressed anymore. That I felt like I’d sort of cracked the introductory levels (and that I shouldn’t expect to go any higher even if I were to stay there for a decade). By the time I left I wasn’t feeling it was quite as necessary to keep qualifying any statement I made about China by saying, “but China is huge and I’ve only seen a part of it so what do I know?”. 

The surface got itself scratched. Have some photographic proof:


Visited in 2016: Beijing, Shanghai, Hangzhou, Qingdao, Chengdu, Jiuzhaigou, Harbin, Nanjing

你好 China

I arrived in China a few months ago, and I’m now working as an English Language teacher here. The aim is really quite simple; throw myself into a new continent and find out how much of it I can explore. The first 3 months have gone well. Here are a few photos:

Life in Bolivia

Right now I live in Bolivia; teaching English as a foreign language to adults and children at a private language institute (elementary-intermediate level). I passed a full-time CELTA course while in London with a grade A so I am fully qualified to teach English in private classes, 1-to-1 or in corporate classes to fund a currently-South-Americo-centric travelling habit.

I am still taking on video projects and have completed two video jobs for Cambridge College already since my arrival. I have signed up for a further video project with another private company, but am available for other freelance video projects in Santa Cruz if required.

Added later: here are some photos!

 

 

Showreels

Showreels:

Filmmaker Showreel

 

Features: York Come Dancing (Director), Shed (Director), Probability of Love (Director), The Knight that Killed Me (Producer), Casa De Carmona (Writer/Director), Amusia (Crew), Follow the Leader (Crew), Orca the Goldfish (Director), Giant (Crew), Guided Tour of Shed’s Set (Director)

 

 

Acting Showreel

Features: Probability of Love (Ben), Giant (Foster), The Right Fit (Boy), The Hypnotist (Dan Lattimer), York Come Dancing (Host), F1 Warm-up Show (Feature Presenter), Virtual Tour of The University of York Library (Guide), Family Trees (Andy), Casa De Carmona Hotel (Tony).

CV Update: May 2013

I’ve now successfully completed my contract with Europarx and flew back from Seville this week. I’m now looking for work over the summer, so have a read over my redrafted CV and if there’s something you think I can help you with; don’t hesitate to email me. (lukemalkin@gmail.com)

 

CV: Luke Tristram Malkin

All the best,

Luke