Wednesday 29 February 2012

Role Model

After watching 4 episodes in a row of The Big Bang Theory last night, I decided that I need to be more like Penny.  As Raj's dad said, "She's feisty!".  She is also sweet, funny and able to say exactly what she thinks.  In a word, she's awesome -- and I want to be more like her. 

Tuesday 28 February 2012

Jobs and Other Things

I went for a job interview last week -- and the whole situation got seriously messed up.  And messed me up.  Not that I wasn't messed up already...

It started off very well.  I got a call out of the blue from a spa owner who wanted me to come in for an interview.  He'd found my resume at my school's career centre.  I was quite pleased and was happy to get some positive feedback: I'd put myself out there and somebody noticed!  Yay me :)

When I went in for the interview, things changed dramatically.  I was left to sit in the "lounge" for nearly half an hour before I had to go find someone to see what was going on and if, indeed, I was going to have an interview.  The office manager apologized profusely for forgetting about me, but the owner just sort of brushed it off.  I am still baffled as to how two different people could forget about someone coming in for an interview.  Anyways, we had a brief chat and they invited me back to give a massage & some reiki to the owner in 10 days.

Part two was supposed to happen tomorrow.  I have been going round in circles over this for the past week and a half: should I go or should I not?  Part of me said I should go and follow through, see what exactly the job was all about , do it for the experience, etc, etc.  The other part of me said I shouldn't waste my time with people who are so unprofessional.  The practical side of me said "go" but my gut said "no". 

Even this morning I had no idea what I should do -- until I was asked about it, and started crying for no apparent reason.  Obviously, there was more to the situation than even I understood.  Shortly after that, I got an email from the spa and found myself wondering what the hell they wanted.  I also realized that in all my imaginings of how the second interview would go, I was usually asking the owner for some explanation of how they'd forgotten me.  That's when I realized that I was actually really angry with them.  Not only did I feel invisible, but disrespected as well.

I also remembered that when I had mentioned to a friend of mine that they'd left me sitting for so long, she said something like, "So, you're not going to work for them, right?".  This is part of what I find so frustrating: my friend automatically realized that these people didn't deserve any more of my time or energy and knew that she would have felt wronged in the same situation but it took me 10 days to figure this out!  Why, oh, why is it so hard for me see when other people treat me poorly and stand up for myself?

Eventually I realized that I was dreading the interview tomorrow so I decided not to go -- and I am positive I made the right decision.  It's always better to listen to your gut.

And in listening, I also heard my gut say that I really don't want a job working for someone else anyways.  What I want is my own practice, damn it!  And why should I settle for anything else?  Granted, there are some complications, like the fact that I can't establish a credit history if I don't have a "real" job (and I desperately need to build a credit history) but I'm working on loopholes and other options.  One way or another, this is going to happen.  Maybe not as quickly as I want it to, but eventually, it will all come together. 

It sure as Hell better...

Monday 27 February 2012

At a Loss

I have so many thoughts swirling around in my head but I can't seem to piece together a complete and coherent thought to save my life.  I've been wanting to write for days, but can't seem to find the words.  *sigh* 
So frustrating.

Monday 20 February 2012

Words

You might have noticed I've been pretty quiet.  Lately, the words just haven't been there.  It's a strange feeling for me, to be wordless.  It's not unusual for me to have nothing to say -- I always have a hard time expressing myself out loud -- but it is unusual for me to have nothing to write. 

This last curve ball that Life threw at me (see previous post) really messed me up.  For the first few days all I could do was cry and for the next week or so, I would end up in tears over just about everything.  Initially, I cried because of the news: I worried about the one with the cancer diagnosis and about her children.  I speculated on what might happen in a worst-case scenario.  I also cried because I felt like I'd been given more than I could possibly handle.  I just didn't see how I'd have the strength to support her and those I love when my own life is such a mess, especially considering I have very little support myself.  At least if I had people to lean on and/or people who could boost me up both physically and emotionally (more than one or two who live out of town), I would feel a little bit stronger.  Alas, that is not the case and once again, I was left on my own to muster courage and fortitude from whence I believed there was none.

I'm still pretty fragile but there has been some good news to boost morale: the first chemo session went better than expected, with few side effects.

Also, I had a job interview and was invited to another interview (which I turned down).  The interview was my first in about 15 years, so a bit nerve-wracking, complicated by the fact that they forgot about me.  By the time I came back on their radar, we only had about 5 minutes to have a quick chat.  I got invited back for a second interview in a week and a half so we'll see what happens.   Being forgotten about definitely didn't help lessen the general feeling I have of being invisible, but I'm trying not to dwell on it.

Another ironic happenstance of the past couple of weeks is that while I have been struggling to find my own words, I finished reading "The Book Thief" by Markus Zusak.  If you haven't read it yet, you should.  Not that the story is all that spectacular.  (It's good, but I found it a little slow.)  However, what that man can do with words is absolutely phenomenal.  I found myself reading, not to know what would happen next, but to find out how he would say it.  And what I learned about myself is that a well-turned phrase really does make me weak at the knees. 

So, it's been a tumultuous couple of weeks but at least I've finally been able to write down a few haphazard thoughts.  The words have not come easily today but at least I was able to write something -- and that always helps.

Tuesday 7 February 2012

Stupid Cancer

(That is all.)

Friday 3 February 2012

A Confession

I have a confession to make: I am... a nerd.  I have long suspected this, but after what happened today I was left with no choice but to acknowledge it.  I was in Target, completely caught up in trying to decide whether Tilex or Lysol is the better product when I heard music wafting my way from a couple of aisles over.  The music played for a good 30 seconds -- long enough to distract me from what I was doing, smile and silently congratulate my fellow shopper for picking such an awesome ringtone.  Then it hit me: what I had identified as an 'awesome ringtone' was nothing less than the theme song from Star Trek: The Next Generation.  Seriously.

What this means (to me, at least) is that I have moved from being a nerd-by-association to a full-fledged, self-sufficient nerd -- still perhaps at the low end of the spectrum but certainly on the chart.  Until recently, I have always exercised my inherent nerdiness by simply being around nerds.  Usually not too many at a time, but there's often one in the mix -- at least when the mix is of my choosing.

As a kid, I loved comic books (although my parents would only buy me Archie) and I loved watching the Justice League cartoons after school (the Wonder Twins were my favourites) but I think the whole thing really started when I was about 10.  I remember sitting with 3 or 4 boys in the middle of the neighbour's garage, huddled around a makeshift table playing Dungeons and Dragons.  I was able to do this only a few times before my mother found out and forbid me from playing it.  Which is, I suppose, when I realized I needed to become a clandestine nerd.  From then on, I simply found friends who were outrightly nerdy and watched and learned from them -- without actually getting involved too much myself.

It's only been in the last couple of years that I've begun letting out my inner nerd, mostly without even realizing it. Recently, I noticed that I actually knew enough about nerd culture to understand basic humour and conversation and to start including myself as one of them.  The internet has also made life easier for us closet nerds: reading xkcd.com religiously, "liking" George Takei's Facebook page, watching The Guild and playing World of Warcraft can all be done from the safety and privacy of my own home.  I'm not embarrassed about my nerdy tendencies (the popularity of The Big Bang Theory has proven that there's a little nerd in all of us) but there are still not that many people out there who can relate, so I keep it quiet -- at least long enough for me to figure out who knows when Star Wars Day is.

Thursday 2 February 2012

(Im)Mobility

It took a lot to pick me up this time and push me back out into the world.  Which makes sense: the deeper you go, the harder it is to crawl back out.  But, thanks to poetry, blogs, Facebook, song lyrics and even some real live people I was inspired enough to get back on the proverbial horse.

There's never really any one thing that starts the downward spiral but I do know that feeling stagnant is a huge part of it.  As my friend, K, said, "the act of motion, while seemingly mundane and nothing, sometimes holds the key to new life."  She is so right.  Often, it doesn't even matter which direction I'm going in, as long as I'm going.  There's nothing worse than being - or even feeling - stuck.

So once I picked myself up, I got moving: I started cleaning my basement (aka "the Depths of Destruction"), I looked for office space both online and in the physical sense and, perhaps most surprising of all, I updated my resume and actually applied for a job.  I still need to spend another 2 or 3 weekends in the depths to reclaim the basement completely.  I couldn't find any affordable office space that suited my needs (so I'll stay in the space-sharing situation I'm in for now).  I have no idea what will come of this job application.  But you know what?  None of that matters.  What matters is that I kept moving.  Nothing will happen if I do nothing, but if I can keep moving, chances are something will change.

(I suddenly have Julie Andrews in my head, singing Something Good with Christopher Plummer in The Sound of Music: "Nothing comes from nothing/Nothing ever could"...)

I must remind myself that I not only need movement but that change doesn't often happen overnight.  I need to be patient and trust that all of my motions will carry me in the right direction.  I also have to remember that being and/or feeling stuck is really only temporary -- even if it takes me another year (or two) to get to the place I want to be.  I know it won't be easy but as long as I keep moving, I'll get there.