May 29, 2008

Advanced organization and social interaction

Reason #3,045 that I want a Mac: Delicious Monster, which is software for people with supersonic OCD. I love using LibraryThing to keep track of all of my books, but damn that Delicious Monster makes me drool. Of course I don't have a Mac. Yet.

Someday.

In the meantime, my other new favorite (and free!) application for organization is Todoist.com. I am a habitual list maker and procrastinator, and so far this magical website has both satisfied my base need for list organization and for friendly (yet hard to ignore) reminders of the stuff for which I'm procrastinating. You can upgrade for $3/month to get extra task management perks like text reminders, if you like.

I also went back to del.icio.us to help me keep track of my bookmarks. When I initially signed up a while back, I didn't quite understand why I would need to bookmark sites on a web page when all the sites I needed were in my Firefox bookmarks. After a little more time in the Web 2.0 world, and probably largely because of the fun I had with tagging my books on LibraryThing, I finally get the need and wondrous delight that comes with tagging and organizing sites on a web page. I can access my bookmarks from work (even though that's not an issue at the moment), from my old and occasionally used laptop, from a friend's computer or from anywhere.

But as ooey-gooey as I am over these organization applications and their social interaction integration, I still have a hard time embracing MySpace or Facebook. They contradict everything I ever learned about privacy on the internet, no matter how private they say that can set your profile. And while I accept them as a part of 21st century media, I do not love them.

I have, however, fallen in love with Twitter. When I'm not blogging here, chances are good that you can find me twittering here, especially now that I have a small text message plan and a QWERTY keypad on my new phone (the LG enV2).  I guess I'm not too old to be enticed by all this new stuff the kids are talking about these days.  

 

May 28, 2008

Act like a writer, become a writer

After the first full day alone in my house as a laid-off writer/editor, I've had plenty of Thinking time and Doing time and Reading time. (I'll get Exercise time tomorrow, I swear.)

The Doing time was more tedious and less rewarding than I would have liked it to be, but I tied up some loose ends with my former employer and spent some time on my resume and job sites. 

Then the Thinking time took over and caused bouts of anxiety about The Future and Becoming a Writer. Oh gawd, THIS again? Haven't I already droned on about my "becoming a writer" drama enough, like back THEN and THEN and pretty much every November when NaNoWriMo comes around? Yes, I have. And yes, it all still scares me.

Reading time was the highlight of the day for me, because I caught up on blogs, news, random internet pages, and a book that one of my coworkers loaned me a couple months ago that sat neglected on my shelf for too long (Book of a Thousand Days by Shannon Hale, which was a good YA story based on a fairy tale but with some distracting choppiness). For me, Reading time generally leads to Thinking time, which then sometimes leads to Writing time. Obviously, it's Writing time as I write this.

My friend Steev is in the throes of a defining period in his comedy career with Blewt Productions, and I'm wildly happy for him and my other friends from college who have followed down that same path. If they make it big, it's because of serious hard work and dedication in addition to raw and crazy talent and imagination. I feel really lazy in comparison. But I found inspiration in something that Steev wrote while blogging his adventures in L.A.:

"Act like a big production company, do the things a big production company does, and before you know it, you’re a big production company."

I'm starting to act like a writer and do the things that a writer does. Sooner or later, I hope to discover that I'm actually a writer. Until then, I have a lot of work ahead of me.

(But oh, please, never let me stoop to even whispering the cliche that it turns out I was a writer all along, even if it's really true.)

May 27, 2008

"When Fangirls Attack" blog for geek girls

The feminist geek letter to Toyfare magazine that I posted on my blog the other day showed up in a compendium of links on the fabulous "When Fangirls Attack," which collects links of topical interest to geek girls of all kinds. Officially, the blog is "A Compilation of Articles on Gender in Comics and Comics Fandom."

I salute the efforts of the three women who run the blog, as well as all of the fangirls who create the linked content, for their dedication to the ever-broadening field of Feminist Geekiness.

May 23, 2008

Pelicans, job loss and existentialism

Not far from my house, there is a pond about 1/3 acre big outside of a local corporation's building complex. Early last week on my way home from work, I peered to my right (because just driving is so boooooring, you know?) to look at the waterfowl that like to hang out there. Most of the time I see white geese and mallard ducks.

Then I noticed the pelicans.

"What the...?" I said to myself, at a loss for words even inside my head. I pulled off the road and got out of my car to see if I actually saw what I thought I saw. Sure enough:

pelicans at a corporate pond in Utah

I counted eight of them in a little flock, just hanging out on the side of the pond by the road. Big, bright white and beautiful... and one with a distended gular pouch (that big throat flap that hangs down from its bill where they hold their fishy food; yes I had to google it). Those bills are really, really long. ("She's all beak, man!")

As I crept closer, they slowly moved into the water. One spread its wings, presumably to show me how big and powerful and scary he/she was so that I wouldn't come closer. Like I was going to jump in and try to eat it, right? But the beautiful black banding on the underside of its impressive wingspan was amazing.

Not something that I expected from a boring drive home from work. I've never seen pelicans in the wild (if you count a man-made pond as the wild). I only had my phone with me at the time and the photos I took with it didn't really come out, so I stopped by again last night to see if they were still there. I had to trespass on the company's property and walk halfway around the pond to get these shots, stepping over curiously large mounds of duck poop both ways.

I'm still trying to sort out my reaction to being laid off, so writing about the beauty of unexpected roadside pelicans is a nice diversion and more zen than dwelling on my underlying anxiety of an uncertain future.

Yesterday afternoon, after the initial shock of the conference room group lay-off, I spent an hour or so talking with several of my coworkers who weren't laid off. They were all very apologetic and shocked themselves, similar to how I've reacted during previous lay-offs when I was not affected. I was touched by the genuine nature of their consolation, their immediate efforts to help me find a new job through their own networks, and their assurance that it will be easy for me find another job with my "level of talent."  I already miss working with them.

My biggest anxiety yesterday afternoon was how to tell Ben, who kept leaving messages on my desk phone because he wanted to know when I could leave work for a special no-occasion weeknight dinner at the Chinese Buffet. (That's what I wrote about yesterday: When life hands you lemons, buy a fish.)

Other than that, I focused my attention on obtaining contacts from my coworkers and making sure that people I liked and respected had my personal contact information. My boss is "transitioning" back to the sales department, so I offered my services as a contractor to his boss, who is now in charge of what's left of the marketing department.

As the writer and editor, I worked with a lot of different people in different departments. My job is being split among three different people, and it makes me sad that my efforts to create and maintain cohesive and creative branded communication will most certainly disappear quickly in the hands of people who don't care, don't have the time, or don't have the talent to make that happen. That may sound pompous, but I take pride in my writing and have learned that it's a vocation above all else. That was a really hard lesson to learn. I've been thinking about creating a separate blog that is strictly about my journey as a writer.

Ironically, I spent my lunch hour the day before I was laid off looking at "becoming a full-time freelance writer" books at Barnes & Noble. I've been seriously thinking about pursuing freelance writing gigs and had been working out a plan to transition out of my job in the next year. So while the lay-off was unexpected, it won't hurt me as much as it did my other coworkers who needed the insurance, were the family breadwinners, etc.

Ben and I will be on a more strict budget in the near future, but it won't be that much of a change for us considering that the majority of our extra pennies were begrudgingly going toward home improvement anyway.

I'm going into the office this afternoon to collect my personal belongings from my cubicle and to share some tidbits of importance with the VP who will be over marketing. Though I do kind of want to stomp up and down and scream an obscenity or two, just to be immature because things didn't pan out the way I wanted them to, I'm not dumb enough to burn a bridge where I think I could easily be hired back part-time as a contactor or full-time in the future if/when the company gets its act together. Not that I necessarily want to go back there full-time.

I was told that I was the most difficult lay-off decision they had to make, and whether or not that's total bullshit, I can't help but daydream about the day that I get a phone call begging me to come back.

Sounds like a classic break-up emotion, doesn't it?  

I'm still trying to parse all of the things that are running through my mind right now, but overall I'm feeling good about being dumped by my company. It's given me motivation to do something productive and enjoyable rather than plodding along because I'm too wimpy to give up a steady paycheck. I've really gained confidence as a writer in the past couple years and have proven myself as an editor and valuable "creative" on a talented marketing team.

I have no idea what challenges lay ahead of me, but I'm not going to sit around and wait for opportunity to knock on my door. I'm going out with a telescoping lens and a bullhorn to find it. And then I'll write about it.    

pelicans in a pond at sunset
 

May 22, 2008

When life hands you lemons, buy a fish.

A few years ago when I worked in Cincinnati, several of my coworkers and I kept small fish tanks on our desks. The day that I was laid off, Ben and I had carpooled and I had the car. The first thing that Ben saw when he got into the car was the fish tank on the passenger seat floor, and he said sarcastically, "What, were you laid off?" He was shocked when I said yes.  

lay-off betta in cupholderSo today, after being completely caught off guard by my small company's 22-person lay-off, I stopped by PetSmart to buy a fish.

Ben and I had already decided to eat at the Chinese Buffet right after work, so it was easy for me to suggest that I pick him up rather than meet him there. I didn't tell him I was laid off until he got into the car and saw a betta fish swimming around in my dashboard cupholder.  

He thought I was kidding at first, but we had previously agreed that if one of us were ever laid off we would tell the other person by bringing home a fish. I didn't really have a chioce. Ultimately, Ben appreciated the fact that I upheld our pact.

And now we have a fish on our kitchen counter as a symbol of new opportunity and our inside joke.

The lay-off betta fish

A Qualifying Micro Geek Test

Sam Murray from the UK shared this link with me: http://www.getitornot.co.uk

It's an IT recruiting company that has a 5-question geek test on their homepage as a barrier to entry. Nice work, CW Jobs! I approve that message!  

May 21, 2008

Phoebe makes a better door than a window.

In case you were wondering, this is my view about 75% of the time when I am sitting in front of my computer at home:

Phoebe in the way of my monitor

Sometimes she sits directly in the middle and just stares at me. 

Phoebe is approximately one year old now. Her head finally grew into her body, and she spends her free time meowing pathetically next to a toy mouse until someone throws it for her. She loves to chase the mouse up the stairs (going downstairs is just okay) and will play fetch for as long as her humans are willing, or until she is nearly hyperventilating (at which point she flops down on top of the mouse to indicate that she is done, but you cannot have her toy).

She's about 40 times the size of Isis now, and not too scared of her anymore (though still very respectful when Isis hisses and beats on her). And she's still BFF with Loki (who is still approximately 4,000 times the size of Isis).

Today, before I came home from work, Ben said that Loki was lying on the bed and Phoebe jumped up and nose-dived into his big belly. This prompted Loki to start licking her head. Phoebe responded by biting his elbow, and he in turn bit her ears. It turned into a (typical) scrimmage, which Loki always wins by pinning Phoebe down and squashing her poor little kitty ribs while biting her.

The weird/cool thing is that we've never seen a scratch on Phoebe after one of their rough scrimmages. If they weren't both neutered, I'd think that they were lovers.

May 2008

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