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Muneeb Rehman
Montréal-Ouest, Québec, Canada
“Space Concordia”
bio
Ahoy, I jumped around one society to the next when I joined university, trying to look for what could potentially drive me. Then I came across Space Concordia during the month of May, and things got interesting on a whole new level. During the finishing stage of the Supersonice project, I had the opportunity to work closely with the members who worked on the rocket the whole year. I had not a single clue about rockets, so one question would lead to ten more, and information would keep stacking up overtime. But that wasn’t the interesting part. Space Concordia isn’t just like any other society, it’s just exceptionally organized, and everyone just keeps going forward with the project. The sacrifices people make, working overnight or on the weekends, the physical efforts, the plans, the response to unexpected delays, all just to accomplish a complicated task despite a high possibility of failure, it motivates you. It motivates you to become one of them, to be part of a unique project in which, either successful or not, is so damn worth it. Reaching the Karman line won’t be easy, it certainly was not intended to be easy in the first place. But that’s where my drive is until and after I graduate. Maybe it’s the only competition I’ll ever be working on with such an enormous stake, with so many universities grueling for the impossible. That’s interesting enough.
skills
Engineer
“Space Concordia”
bio
Ahoy, I jumped around one society to the next when I joined university, trying to look for what could potentially drive me. Then I came across Space Concordia during the month of May, and things got interesting on a whole new level. During the finishing stage of the Supersonice project, I had the opportunity to work closely with the members who worked on the rocket the whole year. I had not a single clue about rockets, so one question would lead to ten more, and information would keep stacking up overtime. But that wasn’t the interesting part. Space Concordia isn’t just like any other society, it’s just exceptionally organized, and everyone just keeps going forward with the project. The sacrifices people make, working overnight or on the weekends, the physical efforts, the plans, the response to unexpected delays, all just to accomplish a complicated task despite a high possibility of failure, it motivates you. It motivates you to become one of them, to be part of a unique project in which, either successful or not, is so damn worth it. Reaching the Karman line won’t be easy, it certainly was not intended to be easy in the first place. But that’s where my drive is until and after I graduate. Maybe it’s the only competition I’ll ever be working on with such an enormous stake, with so many universities grueling for the impossible. That’s interesting enough.
skills
Engineer