Wednesday, March 30, 2005

Bad directions

Have you ever had to build a piece of say... furniture. And the diagrams and descriptions are so bad that you're not sure you are building it correctly? And that the only way that you can tell things are going well is that what you are building resembles what you hope will come out at the end?

Well, that was part of my day today. I got a new computer cart for my office. Now, I've built all manner of boxed furniture over the years - from IKEA furniture to really heavy desks from Staples. How hard could it be to put together a small computer cart? Well, it becomes difficult when all of the pieces look generally the same, there is no differentiating front from back and when the diagrams in the instructions are unclear as to where the screws go, that at a certain point I just said, "Screw it!" and started putting the thing together in a way that most made sense. (It also didn't help that the screws were impossibly difficult to screw in and my screwdriver was 4 inches long - no leveraging power whatsoever).

I got the cart together, after a couple of hours of fighting with it. Hopefully it won't fall apart. And I used almost all the parts that came in the box (I figured I could forego the second shelf as my CPU wouldn't fit on the cart otherwise). We'll see if it stand the test of (some)time passage.

If not, well... don't be surprised if you hear on the news about my legs getting crushed by a computer monitor.

Saturday, March 26, 2005

Hey! Where's the ...?

I have moved several times in my life already. The average time I stay in any particular apartment is about 2-3 years. And one thing that I always find particularly strange is the ability to move somewhere and never unpack certain boxes. Then when you move again, these "pre-packed" boxes (in which I certainly do not remember the contents) get moved along to the next place too. There is always at least one box which never got unpacked since the time I moved in.

The other thing that amazes me is the accumulation of shit over time. I have to say, in the course of packing and weeding out what I didn't want to move with me, I must have thrown out at least 15 full garbage bags. In addition, I donated, I think, 2 full garbage bags of clothes to the St. Vincent de Paul Society. But looking at the amount of stuff that I got rid of, I am amazed that I collected all that stuff in the first place AND that there was actually room for all that shit in the apartment.

Right now, we are in the "living out of boxes" stage of the move. That's when nearly all the essentials (clothing, pots, pans, dishes, whatever food there is) has already been unpacked and are ready to use. I say nearly because, every once in a while, there will be a shout from a room asking, "Hey! Do you know where the insert item is?" And then it's a big shell game of, "Well I thought I saw it here, but I think I moved that box into that room... or maybe I just thought I saw it... no, wait..." And so on.

And I know, that after another couple of weeks, when all is said and done, there will be those one or two lonely boxes left, which are going to get stowed away in the garage, waiting for two years from now when we're ready to move again.

Hey, there's that thing I've been looking for all this time!

Friday, March 25, 2005

Flex time

One of the things that I noticed almost immediately is the change in my state of mind since beginning work. As a student, your work is always on your mind, even if you are not working on it. It always hangs there, poking at you from time to time to remind you that it's there. What I have never experienced is the feeling of leaving your work at work.

I now have three projects on my desk, each with different timelines and levels of depth. But once I left the office, the projects stayed there. Maybe it's because none of the projects is due for another couple of months. Or maybe it's just naivete on my part. Or maybe it's just because it's still new. But I like it. I like that when I'm home, I can just look around and decide what I want to concentrate on without this burden of having something haunting me in the background. (Unfortunately, the only thing to concentrate on at home at the moment are the mess and boxes that need to be unpacked.)

It almost seems frivolous.

Thursday, March 24, 2005

First assignments

I received my first two projects today at work. They aren't big projects, but I am in charge of them. They have timelines attached. And they will help me to get my toes wet. My mentor/supervisor decided to take it easy on me and not drop me in at the deep end.

I'm reassured that she is taking the time to make sure that I am comfortable with the material and answers my questions (no matter how stupid they may be) with great patience and completeness. And, as today, going beyond to answer all the extraneous and tangential questions related to the first.

And they say I will get welcomed/hazed at the staff meeting tomorrow morning.

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Blank walls

All around me are blank walls. Blank walls in my new apartment. Blank walls in my office. Empty canvases to be filled with art and memories. Such a strange thing. It took over a year to hang things on the wall of the last apartment. I want to do it sooner here. I definitely want to decorate my office - it is really quite bleak at the moment.

It is odd to me that this takes up such a large part of my brain. I figure there would be other things that one would generally deem as "more important" at the forefront. But no. It is the emptiness of the walls which almost completely occupy my mind right now.

I don't know yet just where to begin.

Tuesday, March 22, 2005

New beginnings

It is a fool's prerogative to utter truths that no one else will speak - Dream

This is the new goal of this blog. Welcome back. A new stage has begun and with it, hopefully a new point of view.

Everyone has new beginnings in their lives at one point or another. Things end, new adventures begin, and we must all adjust. I think that this will be the biggest adjustment I will ever have to make. I have never in my life been anything but a student. Only working toward the next degree or educational accomplishment. I have finished my Ph.D. after 7 1/2 long years and now I begin the next stage.

I begin my new career. The first time in my life that I will not be working toward such a defined goal as a degree. This will be the first time in my life that the day to day work does not lead to an inevitable end. And I am not yet sure how I will react to this. I know I will adjust. But setting smaller goals for myself has only ever been a part of a much larger big picture.

I begin a new life. I have moved again. To another city. Different than Baltimore, different than New York. And I must adjust to the new patterns, places to eat, places to shop, roads, highways and a whole host of other things great and small. I even have to learn to navigate in the dark in my own home (which is hard to do with all of the boxes around). Meeting new people and making new friends - things with which I am not always comfortable.

Uprooting an existance to create for oneself a new life is always difficult, exciting, scary, exhilarating, fun, and any number of other adjectives one can think of. But it is the creation of that new existance that is the adventure. And in that creation, in that learning, one continues to create oneself.