Foundations of Amateur Radio

Why do we communicate?


Listen Later

Foundations of Amateur Radio

The art of amateur radio is many things to many people. For me it's a technological challenge, a learning, a way to broaden my experience, a way to be technically active away from my consultancy. The place that amateur radio takes in your life might be the same, or it might be completely different, as varied as the people I've encountered since I became an amateur.

People from all walks of life with different experiences and vastly different stories. Truth be told, in the decade that I've been an amateur, I've spoken to and met people from more diverse backgrounds than in the forty years before that. I make that statement as a person who migrated across the globe twice, travelled through a dozen or so countries, stood on stage in front of thousands of people, taught countless classes and as a radio broadcaster interviewed people from all over the planet.

From paraplegic to quadriplegics, from people with terminal diseases to people struggling with their identity, from astronomers to astrologers, from train drivers to truck drivers, from mariners to motorcyclists, from working to retired, from healthy to hospitalised, from local to remote, from energetic to sedentary, from happy to sad, from connected to isolated and everything in between.

As a host of a weekly net for new and returning amateurs I've begun to notice that some people are falling away, either sitting on the side because they feel that they have nothing to contribute, or stopping communication altogether.

It occurred to me that for some people amateur radio is the only way that they connect to the world around them. It's the only way for them to meet people who are different, who walk a different path, who tell a different story. It's also sometimes the only thing that makes them get out of bed.

In a world where we're all busy, dealing with the realities of daily life, trying hard to figure out what our place is in that experience and trying hard not to lose your identity while you're attempting this, it's easy to overlook the amateur you didn't hear from for a week or a month.

I know that for several of my new friends, amateur radio kept them alive for longer and made them smile more often and made their life a little easier, even if several of them have become a Silent Key since I counted them as my friend.

When one of the main activities of our hobby is communication, it seems appropriate to take a moment to consider what that looks like from the other person's perspective. What might it be like to be acknowledged, to be validated as a human, to see them and their life, to speak with them, even if only briefly, and to take a moment out of our own busy existence and answer that CQ, or respond to a question, or smile with a fellow amateur.

There is another aspect to this, one which I've not actually seen in the amateur community. Perhaps I've been too busy to notice, but it appears that the venerable telephone circle, the idea that one person calls the next person on the list, who then calls the next and so-on. If the last person doesn't get a call within a set time, they call the list backwards and discover who is not answering their phone. It's an effective way for people to regularly talk to each other and it's an excellent way to make sure that everyone is OK.

In our own community of amateurs we can do the very same thing. Hosting a net is one way, having a daily commuter chat is another, but when you do this, take a moment to consider who didn't check in and see what they're up to.

It's fascinating to me that we're a hobby that's primarily made of old men, yet we haven't actually embraced our own ageing process as part of the experience. Sure there is a need to encourage new people into the hobby, but that's not the entire story. We should be so lucky as to speak with our friends on a regular basis, to check-in with each other and to make sure that we're all getting our daily dose of RF.

So, ask yourself how the community around you is doing and how you might take a moment to check-in with those not so near, but just as dear to you.

I'm Onno VK6FLAB

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Foundations of Amateur RadioBy Onno (VK6FLAB)

  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6

4.6

29 ratings


More shows like Foundations of Amateur Radio

View all
ARRL Audio News by ARRL  The National Association for Amateur Radio®

ARRL Audio News

122 Listeners

icqpodcast's Amateur / Ham Radio Podcast by ICQ Podcast

icqpodcast's Amateur / Ham Radio Podcast

65 Listeners

99% Invisible by Roman Mars

99% Invisible

26,147 Listeners

GB2RS by Weekly RSGB News Broadcast read by Jeremy G4NJH.

GB2RS

1 Listeners

QSO Today Podcast - Interviews with the leaders in amateur radio by Eric Guth, 4Z1UG

QSO Today Podcast - Interviews with the leaders in amateur radio

141 Listeners

Ham Radio 2.0 by Jason Johnston - KC5HWB

Ham Radio 2.0

94 Listeners

Ham Radio Workbench Podcast by Ham Radio Workbench

Ham Radio Workbench Podcast

196 Listeners

Ham Radio Crash Course Podcast by Josh Nass KI6NAZ

Ham Radio Crash Course Podcast

611 Listeners

Amateur Radio Topics by VK6LW/VK6T by Kevin Smith VK6LW and VK6T

Amateur Radio Topics by VK6LW/VK6T

1 Listeners

VK6ARN Amateur Radio News - NewsWest by VK6ARN

VK6ARN Amateur Radio News - NewsWest

1 Listeners

On the Air by Becky Schoenfeld, W1BXY

On the Air

104 Listeners

The Ham Radio Clubhouse by Ham Radio Clubhouse

The Ham Radio Clubhouse

18 Listeners

The Ham Radio Guy by Marvin Turner - W0MET

The Ham Radio Guy

9 Listeners

The DX Mentor by Bill Salyers

The DX Mentor

19 Listeners

Complex Systems with Patrick McKenzie (patio11) by Patrick McKenzie

Complex Systems with Patrick McKenzie (patio11)

122 Listeners