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The TIFF Season

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“In the spring, at the end of the day, you should smell like dirt.” ― Margaret Atwood, Bluebeard's Egg It’s TIFF time of the year again and if you‘re in Toronto, at sundown, you’ll be greeted by a sea of orange. These people, dressed in bright, mostly oversized, orange t-shirts are the festival volunteers. The people who took time off of watching movies, staying in their pajamas drinking wine or just chilling with their furbaby, to help improve your festival experience. A sacrifice that must not be undervalued. I used to think volunteering is about giving back but TIFF changed that for me. Aside from watching all those movies and fangirling, there’s just so much that you can take away from the experience. I wouldn’t trade the endless conversations about the red carpet outfits or secretly devouring the candies in the volunteer lounge while still pretending to be on a diet, for anything else. So if you’re not doing it already, here’s why you should volunteer for TIFF :

Ajji's stories

My earliest memories of ‘learning’ are the stories that my grandmother would tell me. Her stories taught me so many things- they helped me learn that kindness is paramount, that compassion makes us human, that hard work leads to success, and that we must not judge people based on appearances.   Most of my value system, as a child, was built on these stories. My maternal grandmother, or ‘Ajji’ as I would lovingly call her, was a very simple, but a well-read woman with an air of calm and wisdom about her. She had received very little formal education but her books were her treasure. Most of her stories would revolve around mythology. She would tell us stories of kings and queens, some evil, some kind. She would tell us stories of the Gods, from the Sanskrit texts that she would read in the temple. And some stories that she had heard from her parents and grandparents. These were the stories that I found the most interesting- they had been handed down from one generation to another an

Something New

I am a Learning & Development Consultant and sit in the Human Resources area. If you walk by my desk, you will notice a small card, carefully pinned to the board. It is the Ontario Working at Heights certificate from a course I attended a few years ago. Given my role, I often get a lot of questions about it. While the reason why I attended the course was to convert parts of it to an online module, there was a surprise learning. I found out more about myself as a learner and how my brain processes new information than I did about working at heights. The first part of that course was a lecture on the key concepts. This was the part where I felt I was in that room only for the bagels and doughnuts (they were delicious!). However, in the second half, the instructor took us to the warehouse and we got to see real ladders, harnesses, etc. I climbed a ladder for the first time and it was a great experience. That day, I found out that I learn better by actually doing the job. It h