Saturday, May 2, 2026

Weaving Together My Life Story In A Series Of Blogs

The blog has always been a great platform for storytelling. Over time, I have shared many things about my history, my present, and goals for the future - they are:


My Life Story - Have you ever thought about the impact of big decisions that you made in your life? How about the small ones or the ones made for you? How would have your life turned out if things went the other way?

My Love Story - Michelle and met on October 15, 2010 in a serendipitous way. We were both part of a charity in Raleigh, NC and one night at a dinner struck up a conversation about many things - including our love of travel.

My Housing Story - After 13 moves and stops in three Canadian Provinces and three U.S. States, here is my journey in pictures from the Northwest to the Southeast of North America.

My Car Story - I have the dubious honor of getting speeding tickets on all 6 driveable continents - lucky that there are no cars in Antarctica! Did I ever tell you the time I passed the Polizia in Italy with my mom?

My Travel Story - The story started with a "Rollerblades and Red Bull" journey to 100 countries. It is now expanding in every direction after hitting 7 continents and the 7 wonders of the world (most with kids in tow).

My Nautical Story - I am pretty sure the love of water started in 1972 when I was six weeks old and my grandparents Bob and Dona McBain retired to Shuswap, British Columbia, Canada, and built a log cabin.

My Crazy MBA Story - In the summer of 2017, while climbing Machu Picchu, Peru as part of my wife Michelle’s International MBA from Manhattan College, I thought – why not me?

My Hockey Story - As long as I can remember, I have been playing hockey. Over four and a half decades and thousands of games later, I still lace them up a couple times a week, year-round.

My Cycling Story - When the Covid-19 pandemic first took hold in March 2020 we responded quickly as a family - including strict stay at home orders and no outside contact until we could get a handle on the risks. My attention now turned to exercise - and biking across North America (virtually).

My Retirement Story - I have no interest in disconnecting fully from the work that makes me so fulfilled. I could never see myself  in bingo-playing retired life. I want to stay curious, engaged, and adding value past the (very specific) date in 2034 that I am aiming for.

My Christmas Story - Whether traveling to see family, or going to Disney or Hawaii, or simply staying home - the season is packed with memories of family and friends.

My Music Story - My favorite music can be best defined as sad / emotional / multi-level slow music. Oddly, it is opposite of my worldview - which is normally overly-positive and optimistic.

My Movie Story - Oddly enough, I think Pretty Woman made me very interested in business. I named my cat Austin Powers - oh, and yes, "Danger" is his middle name. Our current dog is named August Rush (Auggie Doggy). Movies such as Planes, Trains & Automobiles, Forrest Gump, & National Lampoon's Vacation have become soundtracks to my life.

These are all my personal stories. My business stories wrap around channels, partnerships, alliances, and ecosystems and can be found here

Also business related, on this platform I named the top 100 most visible channel influencers and top 100 global women in technology groups that continue to get thousands of visitors per month.

Thanks for taking a walk with me through memory lane!




Demographics are a fascinating way of predicting future trends, opportunities, and threats.For example, we knew for the last 8 years that millennials would become the #1 buyer in the $6.07 trillion tech industry last year.

--> We also know that China will drop their population in half (1.41 billion to 633 million) by 2100 due to the disastrous One-Child Policy.

The average age is already 40.6 years old and they will be facing a similar economic fate as Japan because of demographics.

We are not only in the AI-race for the next 20 years, we are also in an immigration race as most of the world (minus Africa and some of the Middle East) are not at a 2.1 child replacement rate.

Far from it.

It would also behoove us (as global citizens) to encourage the economic and geopolitical development of Africa to handle the coming population boom.

--> Africa will double in population size by 2050 and the situation is a study in extreme contrast.

The continent is home to the world's most significant demographic "boom" while simultaneously navigating localized crises of violence, disease, and structural instability.

Africa’s population is "chronically young". Half of the citizens in sub-Saharan Africa are under 21 years old. About 12 million enter the labor market every year and only 3 million formal wage jobs are created annually.

This youth bulge can be a demographic dividend if educated and employed, but without opportunities, it becomes a primary driver of social instability and recruitment for extremist groups.

More challenges:

1. Over half of the low-income countries in the region are at high risk of debt distress, leaving little money for "human capital" (schools and hospitals).

2. Traditional foreign aid from the West (ie. USAID has cut upwards of 60% in past year) and China has been falling since the pandemic, forcing African nations to look toward "self-reliance" and diaspora philanthropy.

3. Severe droughts in East Africa have worsened food security, making children even more vulnerable to diseases they might otherwise survive.

--> Analysts tend to call demographics "destiny in slow motion."

Unlike economic forecasts or polling (which can shift with every tweet) demographic data is remarkably "sticky" because the people who will make up the workforce, the taxpayer base, and the buyer markets twenty years from now have, for the most part, already been born.