Nat Paynter

Nat Paynter

Director of Water Programs


charity:water

New York, NY USA


From an early age, we're told 'You're either humanities or you're hard sciences.' And that's not true. You can do both.

Videos

By Roadtrip Nation

Nat Paynter

Milestones

My road in life has been direct.
Spent his life pursuing a career in literature; once he finally found a job in publishing, he realized he no longer enjoyed reading.
When he was 25, his father died suddenly; Nat realized how little control he had over his life.
Realizing that he, too, could die at any time was the final impetus he'd needed to quit his job.
Went back to school to get another undergraduate degree in engineering; had to start all the way at the bottom, in pre-algebra.
Realized that hard science and math were also just languages, and he just had to figure out what each sentence was trying to tell him.
Finished his master's degree in engineering at MIT then went to work for the World Bank's Water and Sanitation Program.
His work took him to Tanzania, where he was exposed to a lack of clean water first-hand.
He's made access to clean water his life's work because he sees it as the world's biggest, yet most solvable, problem.
Keep following my journey

Career

Director of Water Programs

I develop programs to help people around the world gain access to clean water.

Career Roadmap

Roadmap
My work combines:
My work combines:
Non-Profit Organizations
Science
Upholding a Cause and Belief

Hurdles

Challenges I Overcame

Other

Interviewed By

Getting in Touch with Childhood Dreams

Getting in Touch with Childhood Dreams

The team lands at the doorstep of the MIT Media Lab, where they speak with a graduate assistant in the robotics department. Next, they talk with two women who founded sOccket, a soccer ball that generates electricity, and the co-founder of Bamboo Bike Studio. The Roadtrippers also stop at the USA Shaolin Temple in New York City, where they meet founder Shi Yan Ming who is known for his super-human abilities-such as breaking rocks with his skull. They end the week with Nat Paynter, director of water programs at Charity Water.