Posts Tagged ‘Reflecting’

It was my last day.

Sunday, July 29th, 2007

Eight years, that’s how long I was there. I had just graduated college and moved in with Management when I began with the company as a fixed assets analyst–a truly glorious title for an individual whose purpose is to keep track how many chairs, desks, and filing cabinets a company has purchased. I was excited as this was my first job that did not entail lifting, carrying, cutting, welding, machining, or the wearing of steel-toed boots. With the job came more money and we were now able to afford a bed–sleeping on an air mattress for several months was beginning to impact our fledgling engagement–as well as purchase a television and subscribe to cable. We had arrived.

Those years saw our wedding, my starting and finishing graduate school, three apartments, our first home, and our first child. We have had four cats, well five if you count the rescue we had for one tortuous week, a dog, twenty or so fish, countless houseplants, and only one real vacation: our honeymoon. On the job, I became a project coordinator then project manager, which evolved into an Access developer position. When the department I was originally hired into reorganized I found myself in IT as an application and database developer and after the company began downsizing it was a struggle to hold onto my job as a helpdesk support technician and occasional systems administrator, a job I performed for most of my career with them.

It was that position within IT that fueled my love for Microsoft and which, after time, permanently soured me on them and their products. It was on that job that I was given the time to explore Open Source and to foster my devotion for “Free as in speech” software. My general malaise with my daily routine pushed me to design and develop networks and service architectures at home and to pick up side jobs with my meager skills. Without that job, or the good friend who believed in me enough to get me hired, as well as the understanding flexibility of my former boss I would not be walking into my new position as a network administrator tomorrow.

I am thankful for those years. Each one has taught me something about people, life, and myself and it will be odd to awake next morning and not drive those same streets, to sit in that same chair, and have the same conversation about setting print areas in Excel. Yet for all its strangeness it will be exhilarating to see what tomorrow and the next day bring, especially since there will be no office, no hours, no face time. Rather, I will be judged on merit and ability. I look forward to see how my life grows and changes in these years to come.

Gabriella In Three

Monday, July 9th, 2007

The Weeks: Twenty-Five

Little Hands

I'm so hungry I could eat this table.

Memories like clouds

Saturday, June 16th, 2007

Memories like clouds

Meme of Eight

Thursday, May 31st, 2007

Well, I’m finally tackling a meme and it has nothing to do with lolcats! Tagged by my friend Kirstin, this one is about posting eight little known facts about myself and then tagging eight people in return.

  1. I hate the taste and texture of coconut so much that I often tell people I’m allergic so I don’t have to sample their German Chocolate cakes.
  2. I didn’t go to my junior prom. Instead two of my friends and I got loaded on Mountain Dew and Little Debbie snack cakes, skipped school, and drove to Schenectady, NY because the name sounded funny and because it was the closest place to buy War Hammer figures without going to Boston or NYC.
  3. My house is littered with tiny scraps of paper with bullet points scribbled on them as I obsessively make lists be it songs, shopping, bills, or books but rarely use or act on them.
  4. I don’t drink and I don’t smoke but I’m definitely not the type to go grab a sharpie and paint a big X on the back of my hands.
  5. I played hockey for a good portion of my childhood but when I turned 12 it stopped being fun. It could have been the politics, both the parents and the kids, but I kept playing for a couple of more years because I thought my dad wanted me to and I wanted him to be proud of me. When I told him I didn’t want to play anymore the look on his face made me feel like I had betrayed him.
  6. With 14 concussions and counting I can’t be around strobe lights without getting dizzy or feeling like my head is going burst I almost never go to night clubs or indoor concerts.
  7. I haven’t eaten at a fast food chain in over 4 years now. No McDonald’s, Burger King, Wendy’s, KFC, etc. Management and I swore off of them one Saturday night for no reason in particular but this doesn’t mean we never nosh on burgers and fries, we just look for mom and pop joints to eat at.
  8. 10 years ago I started going by James rather than Jim because I thought it sounded more distinguished. Now it my life can be easily divided up between those who call me James and those who still know me as Jim.

Well, the best I can do is tag eight people sans four, so Mike, Scott, Bill, and Qwynwyn you’re up! ;-)

The Christening

Tuesday, May 29th, 2007

Thinker

Little Giggler

Honestly, I thought that this day would be easier than it turned out. Nothing went wrong with the ceremony and Gabriella was so perfectly behaved sleeping on me through Mass and only complaining at the tail end of the baptism itself because the priest was taking just a little too long for her liking. No, instead I found myself deeply conflicted wrestling with feelings of anger, hurt, and fear.

I was raised in an absence of religion, instead my parents emphasized logic, reason, and skepticism. Growing up I was an outsider as I am not baptized and had never set foot in a church, excepting as a tourist, until I met my wife. To me matters of faith and religious belief were a curiosity as they are not something I have ever felt before nor really been exposed to as many of my friends were professed atheists or agnostics. In these recent years, though, my curiosity has curdled into an aversion as I hear the language of faith become intertwined with that of war, discrimination, hate, and violence, not to mention what feels like an all out assault on reason, logic, and intellectualism.

Sitting through the Mass, I had a hard time reconciling these feelings with the priests call to pray for enjoining my daughter to the church that here I stood on the threshold afraid of the capacity of their faith to do harm and what it might mean to my daughter. Can I protect her? Can I teach her to question deeply and throughly? Can I raise her to be skeptical enough to preserve her personal integrity? What will this mean to my marriage? Will we find ourselves reaching for each others throats playing out the tired stereotypes of atheist versus theist? The stress that day is still weighing on me today.

Management might know a little of my feelings. I have never been shy in expressing my dislike for organized religion, arguing that it is another political mechanism aimed at command and control of people, but I have not really expressed this fear that grips me tightly. We have only discussed this in the academic sense and never really tackled it as an emotional issue. Bluntly, I am afraid of religion and those people that call themselves religious but what makes it even harder to swallow is the irrationality of my fear.

On the surface, the fear might not seem so irrational what with the talk of this administration centering on a “divine right” to wage war, to incarcerate and torture individuals, DOMAs being passed nation wide that couch discrimination in passages from the bible, the ongoing attack on science from religious and political leaders among others. All but a handful of those issues affects me personally so why did I feel my stomach knot up and a cold shiver pass over me while I sat in church holding my daughter? I am not sure.

Maybe I want to shield my daughter from all of that, to provide her with the tools and skills necessary to survive in the toxicity of that environment. I fear for her. I fear the world we are making, or undoing, for her. I fear that I will not be a strong enough husband, father, and individual to help her through it but before I fall asleep, though, I find I am just afraid. Profoundly afraid.

Old Timey Movie Round Up

Monday, April 23rd, 2007

The Killers
Simply awesome take on the hard boiled crime genre as it casts the insurance industry into a less dry light. Who knew members of the property and casualty coverage profession are as tough as nails with steel jaws and a hunger for justice whether by the bench or by the street. Seriously though, Edmond O’Brien and Burt Lancaster were fantastic as was Ava Gardner’s portrayal of a woman willing to double cross anyone just to rise above her past. Great film and highly recommended.

The Letter
Bette Davis’ character, Leslie Crosbie, was about as cold as a person could get. Sure, she said that she truly loved the man that she killed but I had a hard time believing her just for the fact that she came off as the DSM-IV definition of exhibiting sociopathic tendencies. Gripping look into how her husband and lawyer get sucked down the drain as she wriggles and worms her way to a not guilty conviction.

Brute Force
All this time I envisioned Hume Cronyn as the kindly old man from Cocoon and *batteries not included who was married to Jessica Tandy for some half a century. I was wrong. That man could beat the snot out of you with a piece of rubber tubing like nobody’s business. Anyway, great and depressing prison escape movie with Burt Lancaster doing anything he can to break out of Westgate as it falls into the hands of power mad Captain Munsey.

Seven Samurai
This was my first time watching the film and I fell in love immediately. Lushly shot, artfully paced, and beautifully acted I can understand why so many people refer to it as a masterpiece. As someone with little to no attention span for movies I was surprised that I was glued to the TV during the three and one half hours it took for the story to unfold and conclude. This is a film I would buy on DVD to have in my collection, it is just that good.

The Magnificent Seven
I wanted to really like this film, and I did on some levels, but there was one glaring issue for me and that was the character Chico. Drawing from Seven Samurai the writers made the character into a hybrid of Kikuchiyo and Katsushirō Okamoto which lent a very annoying schizophrenic feel to the film when he was on screen. He was either a clown or a hopeless, wet-behind-the-ears romantic and the film would have been better served following more closely to the source material and developing two characters for Chico.