Happy holidays, everyone! In case you didn't hear, I got the efficiency apartment I was looking at in Madison! I sign the lease on Friday and move in on Sunday. If you ever want to make the holidays very easy on your family, just decide to move into your first apartment where you can't just use everyone else's kitchen stuff right after Christmas! I got basically an entire kitchen for Christmas, which means that I will actually have to learn to cook, which is one of those things I always tell myself I will do but then always find ways to get out of it. I have a lot of these: writing, doing crafty things, etc. and I'm really hoping that living on my own will help encourage me to start doing these things instead of to sit alone in my bed reading Cracked articles or just constantly going to other peoples' places instead of being home alone.
I have this fear of being alone. I think a lot of people do. It's a problem. I don't like it. Often, I find I can enjoy being by myself, but my first instinct is to never let that happen. If I have the choice I will be with other people almost constantly (until I can't stand it anymore and *have* to be alone, but that's usually only for a night or so), but I've decided recently that that is pretty unhealthy. Especially since when I am with other people I usually try to make them happy before myself, being a polite midwesterner and all. Now is the time in life where I'm supposed to get to know myself, be a little selfish and make myself happy, figure out what it is I want, etc, so that I am a whole and complete person by the time I decide to marry someone or whatever. I know this all sounds a little hokey, but I feel that it's important for me to feel comfortable being on my own. I'm starting small, afterall, alone in a small and somewhat familiar city close to lots of friends and not too far away from more friends and boyfriend, not even *that* far from home, but a start nonetheless. I hope to spend lots of time with my friends, of course, but I also want to become comfortable being at home with myself, not feel like I have to frantically run around finding other things to do but just be alone, you know? I want to start cooking and writing on a regular basis. I want to do crafts. I want to do a lot of things. I might hate living alone, and maybe in August I can find others to move in with (as was the plan but now I have no idea what's happening with that) but I think it's an important experiment for me to run.
To that end, I celebrated Solstice all by myself. I really love the idea of celebrating Solstice, because I hate the dark and sadness of the winter, so celebrating the last day of it getting darker is perfect. My favorite part about any winter holiday is the lights and the idea of making a dreary, cold, hostile season warm and bright and friendly. If I were at home for Solstice I would probably have gone over to Gaea's dad's house where they have a fun celebration (although I wouldn't know anyone since Jason and Gaea left) and they write down things they want to let go of from the past year and burn them and things they want to keep for the new year and keep them. I really love this tradition and I was thinking of having a party of my own this year but alas, Solstice fell the day after everyone had to be out of the dorms and the day my roommate left for Texas. So I was alone. My first instinct upon being alone is to turn on the TV or a movie so it feels like I'm not alone and then stay in and do that all night. Instead, I finished my Christmas shopping and then drove down to Rockford to go to something I'd heard about on the radio called the Miracle of Lights or something like that. It was a road through a public park where various companies from the area had made seasonal light displays on either side of the road for miles. It was a little silly and kitschy but it was fun. Then I went home and I did my little ceremony, writing things to keep and things to let go of. They were quite ambitious for this year, but I think I can do it. Then I read and enjoyed the lights in our living room. It was a lovely night.
My last day at work was lovely, too. I got cards and a hunk of cheese and the coworker who hates me was nicer than she ever had been since my very first day with her. This leads me to believe that possibly she is a good fairy/guardian angel type who made my life awful because she realized I wasn't supposed to be working there and in the long run it would get me stuck in a rut and be very bad, so the only way she could get me to quit would be to make it unbearable for me to stay. Preposterous? Maybe, but as I like to think the best of people this is what I'll decide for now.
Now I am home and it's been very nice. I thought almost a week at home would be a lot but it's looking like I probably won't get to see everyone, which is sad. But I'm enjoying quality time with the parents and in a little while I'm going to go downtown to see Kathleen, which will be lots of fun. Also, it is Monday and I'm not at work. I actually woke up in the middle of the night last night and almost leaped out of bed thinking "Oh my god, I have to get to work!" Then I realized where I was and that I'd quit and I went back to sleep. It was glorious.
Monday, December 26, 2011
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Onward and Upward
My life is about to change again in a lot of ways, most of which I'm not even sure of myself, yet. Let me explain.
On Friday, I put in my two weeks notice at my job. I'm very grateful that I've had a job for the past couple of months, I have a little more money saved up now and I've been able to pay for a lot of my own things, including my first month of student loans which should disappear on Monday, hoorah. But this job was not right for me right now. In fact, it was pretty awful. It was "in my field" in that it was at a laboratory, but it was much more of a blue-collar job than I had first thought. I think the majority of people who worked there hadn't gone to college, and it seemed that for the most part they didn't know or care too much what exactly they were doing to the dairy products or what it meant, other than following what they'd been taught and getting results that were about what they were "supposed" to be. It was annoying for someone who has spent four years learning lab sciences. And not that I'm judging them or anything, just that it is not exactly helping my career to work there.
The days were long, and the commute was very long. I woke up early and came back after dark most days, meaning that both on the way there and on the way back it became very difficult for me to stay awake and alert. I really honestly think that if I took them up on their offer to work there for six months to forever that I probably would have died on the commute at some point, especially once it starts snowing. I hope and pray that that won't happen sometime in the next two weeks. *knock on wood*.
The long days and long commute also meant that most days by the time I came home I would fix dinner, collapse onto the couch or at most come over to BSFFA and collapse on Alexander's couch and watch something until it was time to go to bed. Going to dance classes kept this from happening every night, or rather delayed it another two hours. Not having internet at home during this period means that after dinner I have to get up and go somewhere and sit in public to get anything done like searching for a better job or an apartment or just reading the latest Cracked article, and the fact that I don't get to the internet on a daily basis anymore means that every time I do a lot of my time is spent catching up on things like the latest Cracked article instead of starting to search for jobs and whatnot immediately (it is also why I've been replying to your blogs like weeks after you post them. Sorry, guys). Not that this is a travesty, but it means that if I decided to take this job on a more permanent basis that it would be harder to get out of.
Oddly, the thing that made me want to quit the job the most was also something I'm somewhat thankful to this job for, and that was one of my coworkers. I don't want to sound super petty or anything, I know every job has coworkers you don't like, and it wouldn't have been so bad if I had had friends and allies with the other coworkers, but while they were all nice most of them were a lot older and they all lived in the same little area of the middle of nowhere and knew all the same people, so for the most part no one would talk to me and instead they would talk to each other about small town gossip. Even when they did talk to me it was often about their kids or some small town event, not that I mind hearing about those things, I just really don't have anything to respond with, which makes it really hard to hold a conversation. Even the younger girl who was not much older than me and had been to college doesn't have much in common with me. She moved to Monroe to be with her boyfriend, whose dad runs a cheese factory (it is a cheese town. Seriously, their high school sports teams are The Cheesemakers. I would not make this stuff up). I asked her if she was going to do anything in the long run with her college degree, which was Environmental Science or something like that. She said, entirely seriously and straight-faced, "Nope. This is it." To be able to say that about ANYTHING in your early twenties, much less about working in a cheese laboratory in the middle of nowhere in the frozen north...it just makes me want to scream and pull my hair out. I did not want to get trapped there. And the woman who was trying to convince me to stay kept saying "Oh there's such a future in it, you could be working here for a long long time, you know, there will always be cheese to test..." and that prospect kind of made me want to cry and drive away from that place as fast as possible.
But no, none of these things were the worst. The worst was the coworker I have been working with the most. She is the bitterest old woman I have ever met. She is miserable and seems to want to stay that way. She is also the most passive-aggressive person in the entire world. I thought Minnesotans were the worst, but I am ready to hand over the trophy to Wisconsinites for this woman alone. She hated me from the get-go. I think it partially has something to do with the fact that I am young and has opportunities she thinks the world should have laid at her feet without having to work for them. Admittedly, I have been extremely fortunate but...it's not like she couldn't have changed anything in her life to end up somewhere else. And it's certainly not my fault. Anyway, I have been nothing but respectful and helpful, but this woman seems to require that I read her mind and anything less is unacceptable. She will get mad at me for asking what she wants me to do. She will get mad at me for doing something that I think needs doing without asking her. She will get mad at me for doing too much of the work she feels is "hers". She will get mad at me for standing around doing nothing when no one needs my help. She will get mad at me for not leaving at 5:00 exactly. She will get mad at me for leaving before she is done with things. She will get mad at me for doing whatever the manager tells me. She will get mad at me for asking her what I should do instead of the manager. I cannot win. And the way I can tell she is mad, besides the venom and sarcasm in her every word whenever she speaks to me, is that she will talk about me behind my back. To herself. Loudly enough that I can hear. About how terrible I am at everything and about how nobody helps her with anything and about how I am trying to take over her work or working too fast or not working fast enough or whatever. Once I even heard her mutter "somethingsomethingcollege graduatesomethingsomething" with the same bile in her voice that I would reserve for saying "neo nazi" or perhaps "baby puncher". She talks about her problems constantly punctuated by long-suffering sighs and seems to think that everything is awful, nothing will get better, and there is nothing she can do about it. She told a story once about her husband saying to her, "Let's be happy." and she scoffed and said incredulously, "How?". Long story short, she is everything I hope to never become. She makes me miserable and I cannot wait to stop being around her, but I am glad that I met her because I do have a tendency to get pessimistic or overly worried or to take my little problems and make them huge and feel like I am powerless to change anything, but those habits lead to the dark side as I have now plainly seen, and I will do everything I possibly can to not end up a bitter angry old woman who takes it out on everyone around her.
There is a quote from Avatar, the Last Airbender (yeah yeah, I'm a nerd but it's a great show shut up), a fortuneteller tells Sokka that his life will be full of "struggle and anguish, most of it self-inflicted" and I have often been worried that that will be my fate, as well. I have a hard time letting go and enjoying things, being positive and just letting things happen. Sometimes I feel like I miss out on good things because I'm so worried about when they will turn bad. But I see that this woman is what happens when that fortune comes true, and I do not want it. I don't think that the secret to life is to be constantly positive and then everything will work out alright, but I do know that I need to work on hoping instead of worrying, or better yet letting go of the future and being happy with where I am. Letting the little things make me happy and focusing on the positive so that even when negative things happen they don't seem so huge. I know it can't happen all at once but I also think that seeing what life could end up like when you don't have that mindset is going to help me a lot, even if it's been thoroughly unpleasant to be around for the past couple of months. Also, every time I was dishes at work and the soap container spits out a bunch of tiny bubbles as I set it down, no matter how awful my coworker is being, it makes me smile. I think as long as I don't lose that I will not end up like her.
So I have quit my job. I'm going home for Christmas and for maybe a week or so afterwards, and then I am moving to Madison. I found a fairly cheap apartment pretty close to all the cool people who live in Madison. I do the application and lease stuff starting on Tuesday, but it's a sublet so I think it should be a pretty done deal? I hope? We'll see. It's an efficiency which is scary because I've never lived alone but I think it will be really good for me, even if it's hard. I'm one of those people who tends to try to make everyone else around her happy all the time and I think it will be good for me to be alone and figure out how to make myself happy, get to know myself, all that sort of stuff. Plus, when I get lonely there are people all around. I'm not sure on a job yet, although I'm getting farther in Epic's screening process, so fingers crossed! I am staying close to Alexander, but I realized that staying in Beloit would be almost entirely just to be with him and that is not really a good decision for me or a fair strain to put on our relationship, so hopefully the short commute won't be too much of a strain, either. I'm nervous and I'm still concerned that I'm not jumping straight into my ideal career, but I also think I need some time to make a little money and have enough free time to even figure out what my ideal career is. While it is scary, I think it's a good decision for me and if it turns out awfully, well it's only until August. That sounds like a long time now, but in the long term...it's a good amount of time for an experiment like this. No matter what, I will experience and learn and I will have friends and those are the most important things in my life right now.
Sorry every single post is SO long. I will try to make the next one short enough that people are actually likely to read it.
On Friday, I put in my two weeks notice at my job. I'm very grateful that I've had a job for the past couple of months, I have a little more money saved up now and I've been able to pay for a lot of my own things, including my first month of student loans which should disappear on Monday, hoorah. But this job was not right for me right now. In fact, it was pretty awful. It was "in my field" in that it was at a laboratory, but it was much more of a blue-collar job than I had first thought. I think the majority of people who worked there hadn't gone to college, and it seemed that for the most part they didn't know or care too much what exactly they were doing to the dairy products or what it meant, other than following what they'd been taught and getting results that were about what they were "supposed" to be. It was annoying for someone who has spent four years learning lab sciences. And not that I'm judging them or anything, just that it is not exactly helping my career to work there.
The days were long, and the commute was very long. I woke up early and came back after dark most days, meaning that both on the way there and on the way back it became very difficult for me to stay awake and alert. I really honestly think that if I took them up on their offer to work there for six months to forever that I probably would have died on the commute at some point, especially once it starts snowing. I hope and pray that that won't happen sometime in the next two weeks. *knock on wood*.
The long days and long commute also meant that most days by the time I came home I would fix dinner, collapse onto the couch or at most come over to BSFFA and collapse on Alexander's couch and watch something until it was time to go to bed. Going to dance classes kept this from happening every night, or rather delayed it another two hours. Not having internet at home during this period means that after dinner I have to get up and go somewhere and sit in public to get anything done like searching for a better job or an apartment or just reading the latest Cracked article, and the fact that I don't get to the internet on a daily basis anymore means that every time I do a lot of my time is spent catching up on things like the latest Cracked article instead of starting to search for jobs and whatnot immediately (it is also why I've been replying to your blogs like weeks after you post them. Sorry, guys). Not that this is a travesty, but it means that if I decided to take this job on a more permanent basis that it would be harder to get out of.
Oddly, the thing that made me want to quit the job the most was also something I'm somewhat thankful to this job for, and that was one of my coworkers. I don't want to sound super petty or anything, I know every job has coworkers you don't like, and it wouldn't have been so bad if I had had friends and allies with the other coworkers, but while they were all nice most of them were a lot older and they all lived in the same little area of the middle of nowhere and knew all the same people, so for the most part no one would talk to me and instead they would talk to each other about small town gossip. Even when they did talk to me it was often about their kids or some small town event, not that I mind hearing about those things, I just really don't have anything to respond with, which makes it really hard to hold a conversation. Even the younger girl who was not much older than me and had been to college doesn't have much in common with me. She moved to Monroe to be with her boyfriend, whose dad runs a cheese factory (it is a cheese town. Seriously, their high school sports teams are The Cheesemakers. I would not make this stuff up). I asked her if she was going to do anything in the long run with her college degree, which was Environmental Science or something like that. She said, entirely seriously and straight-faced, "Nope. This is it." To be able to say that about ANYTHING in your early twenties, much less about working in a cheese laboratory in the middle of nowhere in the frozen north...it just makes me want to scream and pull my hair out. I did not want to get trapped there. And the woman who was trying to convince me to stay kept saying "Oh there's such a future in it, you could be working here for a long long time, you know, there will always be cheese to test..." and that prospect kind of made me want to cry and drive away from that place as fast as possible.
But no, none of these things were the worst. The worst was the coworker I have been working with the most. She is the bitterest old woman I have ever met. She is miserable and seems to want to stay that way. She is also the most passive-aggressive person in the entire world. I thought Minnesotans were the worst, but I am ready to hand over the trophy to Wisconsinites for this woman alone. She hated me from the get-go. I think it partially has something to do with the fact that I am young and has opportunities she thinks the world should have laid at her feet without having to work for them. Admittedly, I have been extremely fortunate but...it's not like she couldn't have changed anything in her life to end up somewhere else. And it's certainly not my fault. Anyway, I have been nothing but respectful and helpful, but this woman seems to require that I read her mind and anything less is unacceptable. She will get mad at me for asking what she wants me to do. She will get mad at me for doing something that I think needs doing without asking her. She will get mad at me for doing too much of the work she feels is "hers". She will get mad at me for standing around doing nothing when no one needs my help. She will get mad at me for not leaving at 5:00 exactly. She will get mad at me for leaving before she is done with things. She will get mad at me for doing whatever the manager tells me. She will get mad at me for asking her what I should do instead of the manager. I cannot win. And the way I can tell she is mad, besides the venom and sarcasm in her every word whenever she speaks to me, is that she will talk about me behind my back. To herself. Loudly enough that I can hear. About how terrible I am at everything and about how nobody helps her with anything and about how I am trying to take over her work or working too fast or not working fast enough or whatever. Once I even heard her mutter "somethingsomethingcollege graduatesomethingsomething" with the same bile in her voice that I would reserve for saying "neo nazi" or perhaps "baby puncher". She talks about her problems constantly punctuated by long-suffering sighs and seems to think that everything is awful, nothing will get better, and there is nothing she can do about it. She told a story once about her husband saying to her, "Let's be happy." and she scoffed and said incredulously, "How?". Long story short, she is everything I hope to never become. She makes me miserable and I cannot wait to stop being around her, but I am glad that I met her because I do have a tendency to get pessimistic or overly worried or to take my little problems and make them huge and feel like I am powerless to change anything, but those habits lead to the dark side as I have now plainly seen, and I will do everything I possibly can to not end up a bitter angry old woman who takes it out on everyone around her.
There is a quote from Avatar, the Last Airbender (yeah yeah, I'm a nerd but it's a great show shut up), a fortuneteller tells Sokka that his life will be full of "struggle and anguish, most of it self-inflicted" and I have often been worried that that will be my fate, as well. I have a hard time letting go and enjoying things, being positive and just letting things happen. Sometimes I feel like I miss out on good things because I'm so worried about when they will turn bad. But I see that this woman is what happens when that fortune comes true, and I do not want it. I don't think that the secret to life is to be constantly positive and then everything will work out alright, but I do know that I need to work on hoping instead of worrying, or better yet letting go of the future and being happy with where I am. Letting the little things make me happy and focusing on the positive so that even when negative things happen they don't seem so huge. I know it can't happen all at once but I also think that seeing what life could end up like when you don't have that mindset is going to help me a lot, even if it's been thoroughly unpleasant to be around for the past couple of months. Also, every time I was dishes at work and the soap container spits out a bunch of tiny bubbles as I set it down, no matter how awful my coworker is being, it makes me smile. I think as long as I don't lose that I will not end up like her.
So I have quit my job. I'm going home for Christmas and for maybe a week or so afterwards, and then I am moving to Madison. I found a fairly cheap apartment pretty close to all the cool people who live in Madison. I do the application and lease stuff starting on Tuesday, but it's a sublet so I think it should be a pretty done deal? I hope? We'll see. It's an efficiency which is scary because I've never lived alone but I think it will be really good for me, even if it's hard. I'm one of those people who tends to try to make everyone else around her happy all the time and I think it will be good for me to be alone and figure out how to make myself happy, get to know myself, all that sort of stuff. Plus, when I get lonely there are people all around. I'm not sure on a job yet, although I'm getting farther in Epic's screening process, so fingers crossed! I am staying close to Alexander, but I realized that staying in Beloit would be almost entirely just to be with him and that is not really a good decision for me or a fair strain to put on our relationship, so hopefully the short commute won't be too much of a strain, either. I'm nervous and I'm still concerned that I'm not jumping straight into my ideal career, but I also think I need some time to make a little money and have enough free time to even figure out what my ideal career is. While it is scary, I think it's a good decision for me and if it turns out awfully, well it's only until August. That sounds like a long time now, but in the long term...it's a good amount of time for an experiment like this. No matter what, I will experience and learn and I will have friends and those are the most important things in my life right now.
Sorry every single post is SO long. I will try to make the next one short enough that people are actually likely to read it.
Thursday, November 24, 2011
Giving Thanks
I know I talk a lot on this blog about the bad things, the things I am worried about and the problems in my life and the "oh god oh god what am I going to do, what if everything is terrible forever" etc. etc. But I am trying to get better at looking on the bright side and being thankful for what I have, which is a lot, actually. And since that is what this holiday is all about (well, that and eating and historical inaccuracy and cruelty to an indigenous culture, etc), here goes:
I am most thankful, of course, for my friends, boyfriend, and family. I'm thankful for having a place to live, and a place to fall back on in case I can't find a new place to live. I'm thankful for having a source of income, even if it's not ideal, and for having parents who are willing to help me out if I get into trouble. I'm thankful that my parents are here with me today and that I'll get to see them in Chicago this weekend. I'm thankful that my friends are willing to help me, too. I'm thankful that I have food and clothes and a warm place to sleep. I'm thankful that I'm alive and healthy and live in a comparatively free country. I'm thankful for the travel and internship experiences I've had, for my degree from a fantastic college, and all the great times I've had there. I'm thankful for so many things I could probably not list them all here, but just one more, before I go. I'm thankful that I am not going anywhere near a store on Black Friday.
I am most thankful, of course, for my friends, boyfriend, and family. I'm thankful for having a place to live, and a place to fall back on in case I can't find a new place to live. I'm thankful for having a source of income, even if it's not ideal, and for having parents who are willing to help me out if I get into trouble. I'm thankful that my parents are here with me today and that I'll get to see them in Chicago this weekend. I'm thankful that my friends are willing to help me, too. I'm thankful that I have food and clothes and a warm place to sleep. I'm thankful that I'm alive and healthy and live in a comparatively free country. I'm thankful for the travel and internship experiences I've had, for my degree from a fantastic college, and all the great times I've had there. I'm thankful for so many things I could probably not list them all here, but just one more, before I go. I'm thankful that I am not going anywhere near a store on Black Friday.
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Decisions, decisions
Well, the job is going pretty well so far. Sam, you were actually not far off. I do get to wear a lab coat and I do look contemplatively at tubes although they're slightly different from test tubes, they're special cheese-fat-measuring-tube-things. The only real problem is the commute which is long. Not unbearable, just...longer than I want to do twice a day every day for the next six months.
They did offer me a real job. About six days after I started work. I dithered and went back and forth and finally told them the truth - that in January my lease is up and I don't know where I'm moving (but it's sure as hell not going to be into Monroe so I can work at a cheese lab) and I need some time to figure it out. They accepted it and haven't bothered me since.
So here is the dilemma. Do I do the "responsible" thing and move to somewhere else in Beloit, keep commuting forever and a half and working at this place for the next six months? I mean, steady work is nice and all...but the commute is awful, plus it's a six month contract-to-hire thing with my recruitment agency which I hear as a six month commitment but I think the company hears as a much much longer one. The woman who was trying to convince me to take it was saying "And there's such job security! We're going to be here for a long long time. You could work here for years and years." which is the kind of talk that makes me want to jump out of a window and run screaming into the hills.
It's funny, I've never been a commitment-phobe when it comes to relationships. Quite the opposite, actually. But I'm terrified by the thought of binding myself to one job or even one place for more than four months. What if I hate it? What if it's awful? What if The One (Job) comes along while I'm in the middle of a committed contract and I can't quit to follow my dreams?
This leads me into a whole separate problem that I'm having right now where I am not feeling at all ambitious about jobs or grad school and mostly all I want to do is hang out with friends and be near Alexander (see that lack of commitment phobia right there?) which makes me feel a bit like a failure and a lot like I might end up wasting my life and never doing anything, but I digress.
I don't like the uncertainty of never knowing what's coming next, I'm sick of filling out job applications and worrying about how to find, get, and finance apartments, but the minute I'm offered a nine month lease or a six month job I balk and want to run. What if I want to go back into the SCA? What if the living situation doesn't work out a couple months in but then we're locked in and get miserable? What if I finally get my ambition back or enough money to travel and I can't because of a decision I made months ago? What if, what if, what if?
Also, where am I going to make this commitment? Currently it seems like a choice between Madison and Beloit, because those are the places with the most friends and I could either keep this job and stay in Beloit or see if my recruiting company can get me one in Madison and/or my mad connections to coffee shops, computer software companies, etc. Beloit is a little bit more of a safety bubble, not only is it familiar but it has a convenient nearby boyfriend which I really appreciate. Not that Madison is far enough to be awful, just slightly less convenient and it will change things somewhat which I am always afraid of. But I drive about the same distance from Madison to Beloit every day right now for my job, so driving it on weekends or even weeknights to be able to see Alexander really shouldn't be a problem or a reason to stay in Beloit where I feel a little bit weird about how not weird it is for me to hang out on campus all the time. I might need to move on.
Or, reapply to the study abroad internship that I didn't get for this year, because there is an opening for it for next semester and then I would have a reason to stay in Beloit and be on campus.
But on the side of commitment, there is my horse. I adore Lark. I've had him for almost twelve years and for the last four I have been far enough away from him that I routinely didn't see him for months on end. It sucks. I feel like others think it's strange the way I miss my horse but he's been an incredibly important part of my life for a very long time now, and I miss living close enough to see him every week. This weekend I drove home to Minnesota, let's be honest, mostly to see him. Not that I don't miss my parents or my friends but I can talk to them on the phone. If I committed to living in Madison, having a job in Madison, or even in Beloit, I might be able to move him to Wisconsin so I can see him on a regular basis. It's not worth it to move him (he really is happy living with the friends of ours that are keeping him right now. He's in good shape, he has a herd, etc) if I don't know how long I'll be there. If I'm going to go jetting off to Europe, Australia, or just the west coast again, then I can't justify moving him if we're just going to have to do it again. I don't want to feel like I can't do what I want because of my horse, but also he's 22. he's in really really good condition, but he's getting a little up there and I don't know how much longer I'll have to spend time with him and I miss it. I miss it so much. I hate that every time I see him now the fun is tempered with guilt and not knowing when the next time I'll get to see him is.
So what do I do? I'm looking at a couple of apartments in Madison this week (one tonight, probably). I'm going to talk to my recruitment agency about getting me something in Madison. It might not be a bad thing to settle and live in one place for a while. Make a little money, work on paying off my student loans and figuring out what I want to do. I don't want to go rushing off to grad school and even most of the wildlife job postings I see don't seem *that* amazing, except for the ones that you have to pay to do. Maybe I could make a goal for myself and at the end of that time/when I get that amount of money I'll go off on one of these internships where you pay to go to Africa and for your room and board there but then get to study elephants for a couple of months or something. Maybe that's a good compromise. I keep comparing myself to those of my friends that are off in cool places doing cool things but I realize that many of them did uncool things first. My brother lived and worked a normal job (granted, one he really liked, but still) for several years in Minneapolis before he joined the Peace Corps. I caught myself thinking about someone I knew yesterday "Man, they are doing something so cool! Why don't I ever do anything cool?" Then I remembered that about a month ago I got back from studying tortoises in the Mojave Desert. Sometimes my perceptions are a bit skewed.
I know I don't have to do everything all at once right now (although it does feel like that) but I also worry that if I don't I will never do them. Maybe I just have to promise myself that I will, but first I have to work and live for a while, and trust that I will keep my promises. I met a woman yesterday who was in her 50s or 60s and told me about the five promises she made to herself when she was 16. She has kept three so far and is actively pursuing the last two. I think this is a little crazy because I have already changed a lot from the time I was 16, and I happen to think that's a good thing, but still, it's an interesting concept to consider. Perhaps I will work on some goals, with the caveat that I can replace them if I think they no longer reflect my wishes in several years or something? I don't know. I will think about it.
Sorry this has been crazy long. I will perhaps try to post more frequently and in smaller blocks of text.
They did offer me a real job. About six days after I started work. I dithered and went back and forth and finally told them the truth - that in January my lease is up and I don't know where I'm moving (but it's sure as hell not going to be into Monroe so I can work at a cheese lab) and I need some time to figure it out. They accepted it and haven't bothered me since.
So here is the dilemma. Do I do the "responsible" thing and move to somewhere else in Beloit, keep commuting forever and a half and working at this place for the next six months? I mean, steady work is nice and all...but the commute is awful, plus it's a six month contract-to-hire thing with my recruitment agency which I hear as a six month commitment but I think the company hears as a much much longer one. The woman who was trying to convince me to take it was saying "And there's such job security! We're going to be here for a long long time. You could work here for years and years." which is the kind of talk that makes me want to jump out of a window and run screaming into the hills.
It's funny, I've never been a commitment-phobe when it comes to relationships. Quite the opposite, actually. But I'm terrified by the thought of binding myself to one job or even one place for more than four months. What if I hate it? What if it's awful? What if The One (Job) comes along while I'm in the middle of a committed contract and I can't quit to follow my dreams?
This leads me into a whole separate problem that I'm having right now where I am not feeling at all ambitious about jobs or grad school and mostly all I want to do is hang out with friends and be near Alexander (see that lack of commitment phobia right there?) which makes me feel a bit like a failure and a lot like I might end up wasting my life and never doing anything, but I digress.
I don't like the uncertainty of never knowing what's coming next, I'm sick of filling out job applications and worrying about how to find, get, and finance apartments, but the minute I'm offered a nine month lease or a six month job I balk and want to run. What if I want to go back into the SCA? What if the living situation doesn't work out a couple months in but then we're locked in and get miserable? What if I finally get my ambition back or enough money to travel and I can't because of a decision I made months ago? What if, what if, what if?
Also, where am I going to make this commitment? Currently it seems like a choice between Madison and Beloit, because those are the places with the most friends and I could either keep this job and stay in Beloit or see if my recruiting company can get me one in Madison and/or my mad connections to coffee shops, computer software companies, etc. Beloit is a little bit more of a safety bubble, not only is it familiar but it has a convenient nearby boyfriend which I really appreciate. Not that Madison is far enough to be awful, just slightly less convenient and it will change things somewhat which I am always afraid of. But I drive about the same distance from Madison to Beloit every day right now for my job, so driving it on weekends or even weeknights to be able to see Alexander really shouldn't be a problem or a reason to stay in Beloit where I feel a little bit weird about how not weird it is for me to hang out on campus all the time. I might need to move on.
Or, reapply to the study abroad internship that I didn't get for this year, because there is an opening for it for next semester and then I would have a reason to stay in Beloit and be on campus.
But on the side of commitment, there is my horse. I adore Lark. I've had him for almost twelve years and for the last four I have been far enough away from him that I routinely didn't see him for months on end. It sucks. I feel like others think it's strange the way I miss my horse but he's been an incredibly important part of my life for a very long time now, and I miss living close enough to see him every week. This weekend I drove home to Minnesota, let's be honest, mostly to see him. Not that I don't miss my parents or my friends but I can talk to them on the phone. If I committed to living in Madison, having a job in Madison, or even in Beloit, I might be able to move him to Wisconsin so I can see him on a regular basis. It's not worth it to move him (he really is happy living with the friends of ours that are keeping him right now. He's in good shape, he has a herd, etc) if I don't know how long I'll be there. If I'm going to go jetting off to Europe, Australia, or just the west coast again, then I can't justify moving him if we're just going to have to do it again. I don't want to feel like I can't do what I want because of my horse, but also he's 22. he's in really really good condition, but he's getting a little up there and I don't know how much longer I'll have to spend time with him and I miss it. I miss it so much. I hate that every time I see him now the fun is tempered with guilt and not knowing when the next time I'll get to see him is.
So what do I do? I'm looking at a couple of apartments in Madison this week (one tonight, probably). I'm going to talk to my recruitment agency about getting me something in Madison. It might not be a bad thing to settle and live in one place for a while. Make a little money, work on paying off my student loans and figuring out what I want to do. I don't want to go rushing off to grad school and even most of the wildlife job postings I see don't seem *that* amazing, except for the ones that you have to pay to do. Maybe I could make a goal for myself and at the end of that time/when I get that amount of money I'll go off on one of these internships where you pay to go to Africa and for your room and board there but then get to study elephants for a couple of months or something. Maybe that's a good compromise. I keep comparing myself to those of my friends that are off in cool places doing cool things but I realize that many of them did uncool things first. My brother lived and worked a normal job (granted, one he really liked, but still) for several years in Minneapolis before he joined the Peace Corps. I caught myself thinking about someone I knew yesterday "Man, they are doing something so cool! Why don't I ever do anything cool?" Then I remembered that about a month ago I got back from studying tortoises in the Mojave Desert. Sometimes my perceptions are a bit skewed.
I know I don't have to do everything all at once right now (although it does feel like that) but I also worry that if I don't I will never do them. Maybe I just have to promise myself that I will, but first I have to work and live for a while, and trust that I will keep my promises. I met a woman yesterday who was in her 50s or 60s and told me about the five promises she made to herself when she was 16. She has kept three so far and is actively pursuing the last two. I think this is a little crazy because I have already changed a lot from the time I was 16, and I happen to think that's a good thing, but still, it's an interesting concept to consider. Perhaps I will work on some goals, with the caveat that I can replace them if I think they no longer reflect my wishes in several years or something? I don't know. I will think about it.
Sorry this has been crazy long. I will perhaps try to post more frequently and in smaller blocks of text.
Monday, October 24, 2011
Job: Acquired! *cue Final Fantasy music and/or WoW "ding" noise*
I am employed! This is terribly exciting! Better yet, it is full time! And it pays decently! It is an extremely silly job...well, the job itself is not that silly but there is no way to describe it that does not sound silly. I blame it on "cheese" being an inherently silly word. But, here goes: I test cheese. So far I know how to test the fat content, I'm learning how to test moisture, salts, etc. and hopefully at some point I will get to work in the micro lab and test cultures. It's long days and it's a lot of standing and moving around but so far (all two days) I really like it! I'm not stuck at a computer staring at a screen, I'm actually doing things with my hands and I get to feel accomplished every time I write down data. It's tangible, which I like. And I get to do a variety of things. Not so much today, but over all I will be. Also we listen to the oldies station, which makes me happy because I can sing and dance a little bit. Also we are not only allowed, but encouraged to wear crappy clothes cause there is acid and whatnot. Plus I get to wear a lab coat, which makes me feel like a real scientist.
The only major downside so far is that it is far away. It's in Monroe, WI, which Google Maps declares is 51 minutes away but is more like 40 minutes from what I can tell. Either way, it is far, and I'm worried about what will happen when it snows because it is on a two-lane back highway. For now, the drive is absolutely lovely and I'm going away from the sun in either direction, which is nice. Also I've started listening to Lord of the Rings on tape as I drive, which was a brilliant decision.
The only other down- or also maybe upside is that I really don't know how long this job is going to last. I am a temp, technically, and paid by the recruiting company that hired me, not the cheese people. When they called they said it would be for a month or two, which is pretty perfect if I can find a job in Madison and move up there (Epic, perhaps? We shall see!) but then when I got there they said they might be looking at hiring me on if they like me and have the money so who knows? That might be okay, too. Although, similarly, I would still need a place to live in January. Either way I can still give two week's notice whenever I want which is pretty sweet, as the other job I was maybe possibly going to get through this recruiting company had a 6 month contract. I like this a lot better.
I'm glad not to have to worry about money right away, and I like what I'm doing. So far I'm having fun and not really mourning the loss of my oodles of free time but we'll see how long that lasts. I still really want to move to Madison if I can find a way to make that work, but I guess we'll see what happens. I still haven't heard back from the far away wildlife positions and I still don't know what to do about that. I'm not going to worry for right now. I have a place to live and a job and even though both will disappear in a matter of months, it makes me feel very self-sufficient and proud, like maybe I will be okay in this big wide scary world, after all.
Also contributing to this feeling: I solved a car problem. By myself. I'm awesome.
The only major downside so far is that it is far away. It's in Monroe, WI, which Google Maps declares is 51 minutes away but is more like 40 minutes from what I can tell. Either way, it is far, and I'm worried about what will happen when it snows because it is on a two-lane back highway. For now, the drive is absolutely lovely and I'm going away from the sun in either direction, which is nice. Also I've started listening to Lord of the Rings on tape as I drive, which was a brilliant decision.
The only other down- or also maybe upside is that I really don't know how long this job is going to last. I am a temp, technically, and paid by the recruiting company that hired me, not the cheese people. When they called they said it would be for a month or two, which is pretty perfect if I can find a job in Madison and move up there (Epic, perhaps? We shall see!) but then when I got there they said they might be looking at hiring me on if they like me and have the money so who knows? That might be okay, too. Although, similarly, I would still need a place to live in January. Either way I can still give two week's notice whenever I want which is pretty sweet, as the other job I was maybe possibly going to get through this recruiting company had a 6 month contract. I like this a lot better.
I'm glad not to have to worry about money right away, and I like what I'm doing. So far I'm having fun and not really mourning the loss of my oodles of free time but we'll see how long that lasts. I still really want to move to Madison if I can find a way to make that work, but I guess we'll see what happens. I still haven't heard back from the far away wildlife positions and I still don't know what to do about that. I'm not going to worry for right now. I have a place to live and a job and even though both will disappear in a matter of months, it makes me feel very self-sufficient and proud, like maybe I will be okay in this big wide scary world, after all.
Also contributing to this feeling: I solved a car problem. By myself. I'm awesome.
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Be Vewy Vewy Quiet, I'm Hunting Jobs!
So I have been enjoying my time here in Beloit quite a bit, actually. I've been spending a lot of my time hanging out at the college with friends and Alexander, whether or not it is good for me or it feels like I'm regressing or whatever, it is really nice. I've been having fun.
I have also been applying to jobs. A lot of jobs. I almost got a job, actually. I put my resume up on a website, the next day I got a call, the day after that I had an interview and it seemed like everything was going well. Then for about a week and a half they led me on saying I got it, I didn't get it, I was back in the running again, etc. etc. Finally I found out I did not get it. I guess under the circumstances it doesn't much matter what the job was. It wasn't ideal but it was really great and I am sad that I didn't get hired, but in the end maybe it will prove to be for the best. I'm not going to lie, a large part of the reason I am sad is that it means I have to keep applying to things. The application process is the worst. I'm so sick of writing over and over again all the places I've worked for the past four years and everything I've done. The wildlife positions are nice because you usually just need your resume and a cover letter, maybe some references. For some of the larger companies they have about ten pages of questions, at least two of each, all asking in roundabout ways whether I'm a psycho or sociopath and if I will not show up for work because I have been killed in some sort of horrific sky-diving accident, or perhaps go crazy and murder a customer. At least, as far as I can tell that is what they are trying to get at. Then there are the applications that you have to get online but you can't fill out online, you have to print the application and deliver it in person or mail it or whatever.
I'm applying to things in Madison, still thinking I might try to move there in January but it depends on a number of things. I'm still a little afraid that I will get too comfortable in a nice city full of friends and will become too content working in a minimum wage or slightly-above minimum wage job and put off/forget about my ambitions and grad school, etc. My parents each separately told me this is not a thing I should worry about. I guess it makes sense, since I won't be able to go to grad school for at least another year after this one (I do not have enough time to apply before deadlines, and I think another year off would be nice) so I might as well spend it in a place that makes me happy. I don't have much drawing me in any other directions right now. I have applied to a few other jobs, wildlife jobs that don't pay much and that mean living in a cramped house probably in the middle of nowhere again. That was fun for the summer, I really liked it and I could make friends plus...wildlife biology but also...friends...I don't know. I guess I'll just see what, if anything, emails me back. Wheeeeee being unemployed! Life is scary but also kind of exciting. No. Bad Karis. Life is SUPER EXCITING AND NOT SCARY! I will repeat this until it becomes true.
I have also been applying to jobs. A lot of jobs. I almost got a job, actually. I put my resume up on a website, the next day I got a call, the day after that I had an interview and it seemed like everything was going well. Then for about a week and a half they led me on saying I got it, I didn't get it, I was back in the running again, etc. etc. Finally I found out I did not get it. I guess under the circumstances it doesn't much matter what the job was. It wasn't ideal but it was really great and I am sad that I didn't get hired, but in the end maybe it will prove to be for the best. I'm not going to lie, a large part of the reason I am sad is that it means I have to keep applying to things. The application process is the worst. I'm so sick of writing over and over again all the places I've worked for the past four years and everything I've done. The wildlife positions are nice because you usually just need your resume and a cover letter, maybe some references. For some of the larger companies they have about ten pages of questions, at least two of each, all asking in roundabout ways whether I'm a psycho or sociopath and if I will not show up for work because I have been killed in some sort of horrific sky-diving accident, or perhaps go crazy and murder a customer. At least, as far as I can tell that is what they are trying to get at. Then there are the applications that you have to get online but you can't fill out online, you have to print the application and deliver it in person or mail it or whatever.
I'm applying to things in Madison, still thinking I might try to move there in January but it depends on a number of things. I'm still a little afraid that I will get too comfortable in a nice city full of friends and will become too content working in a minimum wage or slightly-above minimum wage job and put off/forget about my ambitions and grad school, etc. My parents each separately told me this is not a thing I should worry about. I guess it makes sense, since I won't be able to go to grad school for at least another year after this one (I do not have enough time to apply before deadlines, and I think another year off would be nice) so I might as well spend it in a place that makes me happy. I don't have much drawing me in any other directions right now. I have applied to a few other jobs, wildlife jobs that don't pay much and that mean living in a cramped house probably in the middle of nowhere again. That was fun for the summer, I really liked it and I could make friends plus...wildlife biology but also...friends...I don't know. I guess I'll just see what, if anything, emails me back. Wheeeeee being unemployed! Life is scary but also kind of exciting. No. Bad Karis. Life is SUPER EXCITING AND NOT SCARY! I will repeat this until it becomes true.
Monday, October 3, 2011
Beloit Homecoming 2011
Well I’m back in Beloit and mostly unpacked. I really love the house. It’s the upstairs of a house four blocks off campus, old but well taken care of, with a couple of rooms, lots of helpful closets, a very cute screened porch, and a bright yellow kitchen. Sarah is fun to live with so far, friends helped me move in and some neighbors even came over to help and invite us to go to church with them. It was cute.
Visiting the campus was…weird because of how not weird it was. The sheer number of running hugs I received made me incredibly happy. I happened to move in on Homecoming weekend, which I thought was funny and sort of apt. It was interesting because a surprising number of people had no idea I was moving in, they thought I’d just come for the weekend like the other alums. The problem came when I tried to explain what I am doing here. It ran something like this, “Well, you know, I don’t have a job or any leads really, I’m going to start looking for jobs and looking at grad schools, and Beloit seemed like a more fun place to do that from than home.”
Most people seemed to understand when I put it like that, and everyone said how happy they were that I’d decided to come back, but I still saw (or thought I saw) that look in their eye that said “Really? You came back to Beloit? Really?” and made me feel really pathetic.
But why not? It’s not as if I haven’t done anything after graduation. I had a really amazing internship for four months! I had something to do right out of college, and now I don’t have anything, which is the opposite of a lot of people I know who had nothing all summer and are just now getting things. If I weren’t here I’d just be at home, not that I don’t love my parents or my friends from home, it’s just that there aren’t that many friends left there, they all have full time jobs and they almost all live or work in Minneapolis, which is a frustrating drive or a very long bus ride from Bloomington, as opposed to a whole two clubs worth of friends at least four blocks away, plus the ones living off campus and the ones in Madison, etc. Plus the boyfriend on campus, that doesn’t hurt. Plus if I’m applying to jobs in Madison, Milwaukee, or Chicago it means I can actually interview in person, which is helpful. It might be a little silly and self-indulgent but really, what is being 20-something and having no responsibilities for if not to be a little silly and self-indulgent?
I’m trying really hard not to let feeling pathetic ruin feeling happy. Because I am happy. Happy to see my friends and happy to see Alexander, and happy to see the campus and even the city. Sure, being on campus makes me feel weird right now, because it feels so normal. Bounding down the stairs of AST on Saturday night to the sound of Sig Chi’s stereo blaring Bon Jovi felt just like any number of Saturday nights last year. Sitting around in BSFFA playing chess and making fun of each other made me feel like I was shirking homework and should be sleeping because I probably had an early class the next day. All of this made me feel like I was trying to crawl back into a cocoon that I didn’t really fit in or have a right to anymore, but it also felt so good. It’s not as if sitting on Facebook in my room at home, the same one I’ve had since I was seven months old, with all the pictures on my bulletin board of middle school and high school friends would make me feel less pathetic, maybe just more normal because it’s what lots of recent college grads do, and I wouldn’t have to explain it to anyone (because I would be alone most of the time). That would not be better, it would just be less weird, and it’s not as if I’ve let being weird stop me from doing anything before. This is what I want right now, and it’s only for 3 months and then I will do something else. This is a big thing that’s always been a problem for me: I decide to do something that I want to do and then I freak out and worry that it’s not what I should be doing and try to get approval from everyone around me to make sure it really is okay. That’s stupid and I’m going to try to stop doing that. I’m here and I’m glad and maybe I won’t be later but that’s later and I’ll deal with it then. Woo adulthood!
Visiting the campus was…weird because of how not weird it was. The sheer number of running hugs I received made me incredibly happy. I happened to move in on Homecoming weekend, which I thought was funny and sort of apt. It was interesting because a surprising number of people had no idea I was moving in, they thought I’d just come for the weekend like the other alums. The problem came when I tried to explain what I am doing here. It ran something like this, “Well, you know, I don’t have a job or any leads really, I’m going to start looking for jobs and looking at grad schools, and Beloit seemed like a more fun place to do that from than home.”
Most people seemed to understand when I put it like that, and everyone said how happy they were that I’d decided to come back, but I still saw (or thought I saw) that look in their eye that said “Really? You came back to Beloit? Really?” and made me feel really pathetic.
But why not? It’s not as if I haven’t done anything after graduation. I had a really amazing internship for four months! I had something to do right out of college, and now I don’t have anything, which is the opposite of a lot of people I know who had nothing all summer and are just now getting things. If I weren’t here I’d just be at home, not that I don’t love my parents or my friends from home, it’s just that there aren’t that many friends left there, they all have full time jobs and they almost all live or work in Minneapolis, which is a frustrating drive or a very long bus ride from Bloomington, as opposed to a whole two clubs worth of friends at least four blocks away, plus the ones living off campus and the ones in Madison, etc. Plus the boyfriend on campus, that doesn’t hurt. Plus if I’m applying to jobs in Madison, Milwaukee, or Chicago it means I can actually interview in person, which is helpful. It might be a little silly and self-indulgent but really, what is being 20-something and having no responsibilities for if not to be a little silly and self-indulgent?
I’m trying really hard not to let feeling pathetic ruin feeling happy. Because I am happy. Happy to see my friends and happy to see Alexander, and happy to see the campus and even the city. Sure, being on campus makes me feel weird right now, because it feels so normal. Bounding down the stairs of AST on Saturday night to the sound of Sig Chi’s stereo blaring Bon Jovi felt just like any number of Saturday nights last year. Sitting around in BSFFA playing chess and making fun of each other made me feel like I was shirking homework and should be sleeping because I probably had an early class the next day. All of this made me feel like I was trying to crawl back into a cocoon that I didn’t really fit in or have a right to anymore, but it also felt so good. It’s not as if sitting on Facebook in my room at home, the same one I’ve had since I was seven months old, with all the pictures on my bulletin board of middle school and high school friends would make me feel less pathetic, maybe just more normal because it’s what lots of recent college grads do, and I wouldn’t have to explain it to anyone (because I would be alone most of the time). That would not be better, it would just be less weird, and it’s not as if I’ve let being weird stop me from doing anything before. This is what I want right now, and it’s only for 3 months and then I will do something else. This is a big thing that’s always been a problem for me: I decide to do something that I want to do and then I freak out and worry that it’s not what I should be doing and try to get approval from everyone around me to make sure it really is okay. That’s stupid and I’m going to try to stop doing that. I’m here and I’m glad and maybe I won’t be later but that’s later and I’ll deal with it then. Woo adulthood!
Monday, September 26, 2011
Thomas Wolfe Was Full of Crap
So here I am, back in Minnesota again. Just as I did when I got back from Australia and every time I came home for a break from college I already feel like my amazing summer experiences are far behind me, almost a different life. I don't like that feeling but it happens every time and it's hard to fight.
I do like being home. I love my parents and my friends and my animals (Bravo, my dog, is currently sleeping on the floor next to my bed and I'm going to see my horse tomorrow and cannot wait). I love my room, even if it is still preposterously messy and filled with Stuff I Don't Need. I love the weather. It is cool (even the highs here are about the same as the temperature we got at 3am in the desert on the coldest days) and sometimes cloudy and everything is just so green. I do love fall, even when I am not at all used to it and have to wear three layers to Fest.
I went to the Renaissance Festival yesterday. I love it, even though most of the shows are the same year after year (Zilch said he was going to do a "newer" story and then proceeded to tell one that is on the CD we bought at least 5 years ago). I saw old friends (and missed some others, sadly). It's just...nice. I went to the doctor today, the same office I've been going to my entire life. How do you even go about finding a new doctor?
Here is another difficult predicament to be in facing an entirely unknown future: Where do I want to live? I love the Midwest, I really do, but I'm sick of the winters and I need a change. Over the summer working every day in the desert was absolutely beautiful but every weekend we visited somewhere with trees (especially Sequoia) and water I just felt so much more calm and happy. I think trees are a requirement for anywhere I live. Plus my body and the desert just aren't friends. I could not keep myself hydrated. Once, after I'd been in the desert for three months, I drank 6 liters (almost 2 gallons) of water in a day (granted, a day with a lot of hiking but it wasn't that strenuous) and STILL felt headachey and sick at the end of it. I also love mountains, and the ocean. When I visited friends in San Diego I was shocked that out of the 4 people I was staying with, who had been in the city for lengths of time varying from one month to almost three years, not a single one of them had been in the ocean yet. I, on the other hand, was in the city for two days and swam on each. I got teased a lot this summer for being the first one in and the last one out almost any time there was any body of water large enough to take a dip. I may not need to live near the ocean, but I at least need a lot of good lakes.
Then there's the whole city vs. country issue. In general I consider myself more of a country type of girl, which is good if I want to continue this whole wildlife biology type of thing. But when I visited San Diego with my friends walking through Balboa Park I realized how much I love museums and theatres and arboretums and events with people...the kinds of things that are generally more plentiful and done better in big cities. However, I could never live in a big city that didn't have an easy way to escape the cityness. The only city I have ever really and truly felt 100% comfortable in, the only city where I got that "Yeah. I could live here." kind of feeling, was Sydney. I think a lot of it had to do with the amount of ocean surrounding it, the sunshine, the cleanliness, the public transport, the friendliness of the people, and especially the absolutely enormous botanical gardens. They were huge and beautiful and teeming with life. The only problem with Sydney is that it is a million billion miles away from everyone I love.
The other great thing about cities, I just have to digress for a second, is the radio. God, how I missed Minnesota Public Radio! In Barstow it wasn't that they had a lack of stations, it was just that almost every single station fit into one of three categories: Jesus, Mexican Polka, or Pop Music. Needless to say, I spent a lot of the summer listening to pop and have consequently developed the theory that as long as a pop song is catchy (which they all are) the more times you hear it the more you will begin to like it, no matter how much you hated it to begin with. By the end of the summer I would not even change the station when even the songs that had made me want to gag earlier in the summer would come on. It was a little like being brainwashed.
But really, how do you pick a place to live? Generally speaking many people pick based on where their job takes them, but it has to be some kind of consideration. Currently I am choosing based on where the greatest number of my friends are and moving to Beloit. But where to after that? Should I find another field job, any that will take me, and just go there? Should I move to Madison to further maximize my friend-surroundedness? Should I go somewhere I've never been before but have always wanted to go? Or should I follow Miles' example and travel around for a while, searching for the perfect place, and only settle down when I decide the town I've found is the one that I want to be living in? How do you know where you really want to live unless you live there?
All I know is that I think 3 months should be my limit for actually living in Beloit. I know that everyone I've talked to has told me that it won't be weird and they want me around and everything, but I'm getting nervous about it. I think it's going to be weird for me even if it isn't for other people. Maybe it won't be and I'm overthinking it, and maybe it shouldn't be, but I think it might. But then again, I think living anywhere is going to be weird for a while. Barstow certainly was, living at home for an extended period would definitely become weird, any new city would take a while to get used to even if it were filled with friends. So, I should stop worrying and enjoy my three months of Figuring Stuff Out (followed by a lifetime of Figuring Stuff Out, just hopefully with slightly more solid footing and other things to do as well).
I do like being home. I love my parents and my friends and my animals (Bravo, my dog, is currently sleeping on the floor next to my bed and I'm going to see my horse tomorrow and cannot wait). I love my room, even if it is still preposterously messy and filled with Stuff I Don't Need. I love the weather. It is cool (even the highs here are about the same as the temperature we got at 3am in the desert on the coldest days) and sometimes cloudy and everything is just so green. I do love fall, even when I am not at all used to it and have to wear three layers to Fest.
I went to the Renaissance Festival yesterday. I love it, even though most of the shows are the same year after year (Zilch said he was going to do a "newer" story and then proceeded to tell one that is on the CD we bought at least 5 years ago). I saw old friends (and missed some others, sadly). It's just...nice. I went to the doctor today, the same office I've been going to my entire life. How do you even go about finding a new doctor?
Here is another difficult predicament to be in facing an entirely unknown future: Where do I want to live? I love the Midwest, I really do, but I'm sick of the winters and I need a change. Over the summer working every day in the desert was absolutely beautiful but every weekend we visited somewhere with trees (especially Sequoia) and water I just felt so much more calm and happy. I think trees are a requirement for anywhere I live. Plus my body and the desert just aren't friends. I could not keep myself hydrated. Once, after I'd been in the desert for three months, I drank 6 liters (almost 2 gallons) of water in a day (granted, a day with a lot of hiking but it wasn't that strenuous) and STILL felt headachey and sick at the end of it. I also love mountains, and the ocean. When I visited friends in San Diego I was shocked that out of the 4 people I was staying with, who had been in the city for lengths of time varying from one month to almost three years, not a single one of them had been in the ocean yet. I, on the other hand, was in the city for two days and swam on each. I got teased a lot this summer for being the first one in and the last one out almost any time there was any body of water large enough to take a dip. I may not need to live near the ocean, but I at least need a lot of good lakes.
Then there's the whole city vs. country issue. In general I consider myself more of a country type of girl, which is good if I want to continue this whole wildlife biology type of thing. But when I visited San Diego with my friends walking through Balboa Park I realized how much I love museums and theatres and arboretums and events with people...the kinds of things that are generally more plentiful and done better in big cities. However, I could never live in a big city that didn't have an easy way to escape the cityness. The only city I have ever really and truly felt 100% comfortable in, the only city where I got that "Yeah. I could live here." kind of feeling, was Sydney. I think a lot of it had to do with the amount of ocean surrounding it, the sunshine, the cleanliness, the public transport, the friendliness of the people, and especially the absolutely enormous botanical gardens. They were huge and beautiful and teeming with life. The only problem with Sydney is that it is a million billion miles away from everyone I love.
The other great thing about cities, I just have to digress for a second, is the radio. God, how I missed Minnesota Public Radio! In Barstow it wasn't that they had a lack of stations, it was just that almost every single station fit into one of three categories: Jesus, Mexican Polka, or Pop Music. Needless to say, I spent a lot of the summer listening to pop and have consequently developed the theory that as long as a pop song is catchy (which they all are) the more times you hear it the more you will begin to like it, no matter how much you hated it to begin with. By the end of the summer I would not even change the station when even the songs that had made me want to gag earlier in the summer would come on. It was a little like being brainwashed.
But really, how do you pick a place to live? Generally speaking many people pick based on where their job takes them, but it has to be some kind of consideration. Currently I am choosing based on where the greatest number of my friends are and moving to Beloit. But where to after that? Should I find another field job, any that will take me, and just go there? Should I move to Madison to further maximize my friend-surroundedness? Should I go somewhere I've never been before but have always wanted to go? Or should I follow Miles' example and travel around for a while, searching for the perfect place, and only settle down when I decide the town I've found is the one that I want to be living in? How do you know where you really want to live unless you live there?
All I know is that I think 3 months should be my limit for actually living in Beloit. I know that everyone I've talked to has told me that it won't be weird and they want me around and everything, but I'm getting nervous about it. I think it's going to be weird for me even if it isn't for other people. Maybe it won't be and I'm overthinking it, and maybe it shouldn't be, but I think it might. But then again, I think living anywhere is going to be weird for a while. Barstow certainly was, living at home for an extended period would definitely become weird, any new city would take a while to get used to even if it were filled with friends. So, I should stop worrying and enjoy my three months of Figuring Stuff Out (followed by a lifetime of Figuring Stuff Out, just hopefully with slightly more solid footing and other things to do as well).
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
...Now What?
This is the predominant question in my life right now, and I honestly can't foresee a time where it will not be. It's big and scary and immovable. It was a question all last year, when I was a senior, it was a question all through this internship, and now that I am leaving and going back to Beloit, it is a very very urgent question. The problem is, I don't know, and I don't know how to know.
I am very good at being a student. Just ask my grades. I am goal-oriented and I work hard and I get things done. I have always worked hard to get to the next level, and I have always known what the next level was going to be. In middle school I worked hard to get to high school, in high school I worked hard to get to college, and in college I worked hard to get to graduation. And now...what?
For a student such as myself the logical next step is grad school, and there have been many days that I think this should be the next step. I am planning on taking the GREs in a few months, and starting to look at programs in the fall, but I'm just not sure. I do want to go to grad school at some point, and it would solve my whole planning problem beautifully for a few years: first get master's, then get PhD, that will certainly take up several years in which I will have clear goals and won't have to ask "Now what?". It will also, incidentally, be a great way to hide from this economy, unless in the time it takes me to get these degrees it gets worse instead of better, in which case I assume we will all be wearing leather and fighting over gasoline, or whatever post-apocalyptic scenario you wish to employ. More than that, I enjoy being a student. I love learning. I like being around like-minded people. I like living in and around colleges/universities. It's a good option.
But somedays grad school is the farthest thing from my mind. In which case, I have a slew of conflicting aspirations that fill the void: I want to travel. I want to visit my brother and Gaea, I want to go back to Australia (this is an option for grad school, as well), I really really want to see Europe, and so on and so on.
I want to stay near people I love. This internship has been great and I really like and care about the friends I've made here but I really really missed my friends. There is a huge colony in Madison, which is near Beloit where there are even more, and this is near(ish) my parents and my friends from home and of course Alexander plays an important and confusing role in all of this. I really do enjoy meeting new people and making new friends but at the end of four months all I want to do is go back to a place where I can feel entirely at home and be welcomed into a snuggle pile. This is the option I've chosen for the next couple of months, while I try to figure this all out, and I am afraid it is going to be too comforting. I don't want to stay in the Midwest, for one, which is where most people are (although as I discovered last weekend there is a fabulous Beloiter colony in San Diego which is also quite tempting). I think it is fine and reasonable for me to seek comfort for a few months, but at some point I want to chase other ambitions then "hang out with my friends".
Then of course, there's field work and various biology things. This internship was really great, even while it was sweltering and I was miserable. I learned a lot and made good friends and gained an appreciation for the desert and got to wrangle tortoises. I also got to see a lot of the Southwest, which makes me very happy. However, I didn't get that little bell in my head and a choir of angels singing as I realized "Field work! This is what I must do!" which I was both hoping for and dreading. It would have been great for that to be it, you know? But then there's the whole wanting to be around friends all the time which is not exactly easy if what you want to do is field work. I would definitely do more of it and I want experience with other animals but it's very hard to come by, especially if you want some sort of actual wage. Then there are the other sides of biology I want to experience: environmental education, husbandry, policy, farming, etc. Maybe not things I'd want to devote my life to, but definitely things I want to try. But that is, of course, also very hard if you want any sort of money because you need experience to be hired for any of these things, so you need to get experience some other way (ie by working as slave labor).
Then there's the urge to do something completely different. As I mentioned before, I work hard. I have spent my whole life working hard. Especially in college, especially in science classes, especially the last couple of years. College was a little like running a marathon for me and now I am tired. There is a part of me that thinks it would be really nice to just have an apartment and a job and live near friends for a while. Not a fancy job, not a "going somewhere" job, just a fun job. Maggie has been making being a barista sound very fun. Or bartender. Or...I don't know, something. I would probably volunteer on the side, and it would probably in actuality drive me crazy but it has a certain appeal just at this moment in time. But with this scenario there's the whole problem of future jobs and the big gap in time where I did nothing at all productive is definitely going to be a sticking point for trying to get back into biology.
Then you add student loans to any or all of these pictures.
Seriously, how do people do this?
I know I have time and I can manage to do many if not all of these things and I don't need to do them all at once and I know that plenty of people navigate their way through this and no one really knows what they're doing they just always know a little bit more than they did last year and blah blah blah everything will be okay, but knowing and believing are two different things.
So, now what? This is sort of my question with this blog, as well. I made it to help me as I start this endless life-long process of Figuring It Out, but as of yet I haven't decided how I want to use it. I promise it won't all be long rambling posts about the future and how terrified I am, but I wanted to start out with a baseline. I've probably talked to many of you about all this already, because this has been on my mind for quite a long time and I still don't have any answers. This is the state of mind in which I am entering my voyage into "Real Life". Also, if any of you have any wisdom to share that you haven't already, that would be wonderful.
And now I must try to quiet all these things from my mind and go to sleep, because I have stayed up much too late already and tomorrow is another full day of work and then our last trip together, one of the ones I was most excited for: Yosemite.
I am very good at being a student. Just ask my grades. I am goal-oriented and I work hard and I get things done. I have always worked hard to get to the next level, and I have always known what the next level was going to be. In middle school I worked hard to get to high school, in high school I worked hard to get to college, and in college I worked hard to get to graduation. And now...what?
For a student such as myself the logical next step is grad school, and there have been many days that I think this should be the next step. I am planning on taking the GREs in a few months, and starting to look at programs in the fall, but I'm just not sure. I do want to go to grad school at some point, and it would solve my whole planning problem beautifully for a few years: first get master's, then get PhD, that will certainly take up several years in which I will have clear goals and won't have to ask "Now what?". It will also, incidentally, be a great way to hide from this economy, unless in the time it takes me to get these degrees it gets worse instead of better, in which case I assume we will all be wearing leather and fighting over gasoline, or whatever post-apocalyptic scenario you wish to employ. More than that, I enjoy being a student. I love learning. I like being around like-minded people. I like living in and around colleges/universities. It's a good option.
But somedays grad school is the farthest thing from my mind. In which case, I have a slew of conflicting aspirations that fill the void: I want to travel. I want to visit my brother and Gaea, I want to go back to Australia (this is an option for grad school, as well), I really really want to see Europe, and so on and so on.
I want to stay near people I love. This internship has been great and I really like and care about the friends I've made here but I really really missed my friends. There is a huge colony in Madison, which is near Beloit where there are even more, and this is near(ish) my parents and my friends from home and of course Alexander plays an important and confusing role in all of this. I really do enjoy meeting new people and making new friends but at the end of four months all I want to do is go back to a place where I can feel entirely at home and be welcomed into a snuggle pile. This is the option I've chosen for the next couple of months, while I try to figure this all out, and I am afraid it is going to be too comforting. I don't want to stay in the Midwest, for one, which is where most people are (although as I discovered last weekend there is a fabulous Beloiter colony in San Diego which is also quite tempting). I think it is fine and reasonable for me to seek comfort for a few months, but at some point I want to chase other ambitions then "hang out with my friends".
Then of course, there's field work and various biology things. This internship was really great, even while it was sweltering and I was miserable. I learned a lot and made good friends and gained an appreciation for the desert and got to wrangle tortoises. I also got to see a lot of the Southwest, which makes me very happy. However, I didn't get that little bell in my head and a choir of angels singing as I realized "Field work! This is what I must do!" which I was both hoping for and dreading. It would have been great for that to be it, you know? But then there's the whole wanting to be around friends all the time which is not exactly easy if what you want to do is field work. I would definitely do more of it and I want experience with other animals but it's very hard to come by, especially if you want some sort of actual wage. Then there are the other sides of biology I want to experience: environmental education, husbandry, policy, farming, etc. Maybe not things I'd want to devote my life to, but definitely things I want to try. But that is, of course, also very hard if you want any sort of money because you need experience to be hired for any of these things, so you need to get experience some other way (ie by working as slave labor).
Then there's the urge to do something completely different. As I mentioned before, I work hard. I have spent my whole life working hard. Especially in college, especially in science classes, especially the last couple of years. College was a little like running a marathon for me and now I am tired. There is a part of me that thinks it would be really nice to just have an apartment and a job and live near friends for a while. Not a fancy job, not a "going somewhere" job, just a fun job. Maggie has been making being a barista sound very fun. Or bartender. Or...I don't know, something. I would probably volunteer on the side, and it would probably in actuality drive me crazy but it has a certain appeal just at this moment in time. But with this scenario there's the whole problem of future jobs and the big gap in time where I did nothing at all productive is definitely going to be a sticking point for trying to get back into biology.
Then you add student loans to any or all of these pictures.
Seriously, how do people do this?
I know I have time and I can manage to do many if not all of these things and I don't need to do them all at once and I know that plenty of people navigate their way through this and no one really knows what they're doing they just always know a little bit more than they did last year and blah blah blah everything will be okay, but knowing and believing are two different things.
So, now what? This is sort of my question with this blog, as well. I made it to help me as I start this endless life-long process of Figuring It Out, but as of yet I haven't decided how I want to use it. I promise it won't all be long rambling posts about the future and how terrified I am, but I wanted to start out with a baseline. I've probably talked to many of you about all this already, because this has been on my mind for quite a long time and I still don't have any answers. This is the state of mind in which I am entering my voyage into "Real Life". Also, if any of you have any wisdom to share that you haven't already, that would be wonderful.
And now I must try to quiet all these things from my mind and go to sleep, because I have stayed up much too late already and tomorrow is another full day of work and then our last trip together, one of the ones I was most excited for: Yosemite.
Thursday, September 1, 2011
The First of Many (Probably)
This is something I've been thinking about doing for a while, now. Actually, ever since I got back from Australia. I really loved blogging while I was in Australia; it was a great way to organize my thoughts and share my adventures and observations with friends and family at home. In the near future my adventures will probably be somewhat less exciting than those in Australia, but I need to start thinking of what comes after being in college as a grand adventure/experience instead of THE END OF THE WORLD AND EVERYTHING AS I KNOW IT. It will make things a lot better for me and those around me in the coming months/years. So as if it were any other adventure, I am starting a blog. I probably should have done this at the beginning of the summer, when I really was going off on an adventure to the middle of the Mojave desert, but oh well. I will probably make a post about that soon, to get you all up to speed.
So, there you have it. The beginning of the chronicles of the next stage of my life. Read if you wish!
So, there you have it. The beginning of the chronicles of the next stage of my life. Read if you wish!
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