meet the babe

Random thoughts great and small. Okay mostly small.

Tuesday, November 15, 2005

watch and wait: interview update

Well, I survived the interview. That's what I said on the voicemail message I left my mom after I was done, and later when she called me back she said she'd kind of hoped for a different verb, such as "aced." But I think I was feeling like a balloon with a slow leak, which had finally run out of air. Deflated, but kind of relieved at the same time. As I've gotten older I seem to have developed a kind of anxiety disorder, which makes me freak out about things a lot more than I probably need to. Anyways.

I think I said all the right things. There weren't any questions that I flat-out could not answer, even though big parts of the job don't really fall directly under stuff I've done "for a living." When I started to assemble my publishing background I realized that I've actually been around publishing and information management for a long time, and I've always gravitated toward the "publishing" areas of committees I've been on: newsletters, mailing lists, even minutes. I guess it's in my blood. I know I'd kick ass at this job.

So yes, I believe I did pretty well at the interview, and now it's in the hands of the gods. If I made any kind of impression on those people, I think I've got it in the bag. I'm hopeful, but trying not to be too hopeful, so I don't wind up disappointed.

Monday, November 14, 2005

Tomorrow could be the first day of the rest of my life.

I have a job interview. As usual I am spending a lot of time today trying to get over a bunch of anxiety about letting my current supervisor know that I'm looking for another job. It seems to me that it's really hard to do that without making it seem like I'm unhappy at this job. Which of course I am, but it doesn't seem smart to let my boss know that, somehow.

If I was feeling less muddled by anxiety I might be able to internalize the fact that, rather than feeling pissed off or perturbed that an employee was looking for a better opportunity, my supervisor might actually support me in that goal. I know that if I were in that situation, with a person I was supervising possibly leaving for greener pastures, I wouldn't hold an iota of resentment toward that person. I might have a few moments of "oh man that means some more work for me now," but that passes soon enough. Obviously I know on some level that that is probably the case, and my boss' reaction to my desire to move onward and upward is much worse in my imagination than it will be in reality. What rational reason would she have for being pissed about that?

I guess the other part of it is that I don't really want her to know that I'm going around miserable. Which of course is ridiculous because there is no reason for her to think that. She will only know what I tell her, and if I simply tell her I've approached a couple of potential advancement opportunities, which really doesn't need to affect the way I continue to do my job here, then I have nothing to fear for recrimination at all.

Writing that down hasn't done anything for the knot in my stomach or the trembling in my hands.

Maybe I'm masking my anxiety about the actual interview in my anxiety about asking my supervisor, who doesn't even know I'm looking to get out, for a reference. Because I really want this job and I'm worried I'm going to fuck up the interview, even though all the signs are looking pretty good right now.

Bah. I think I need to shut off my brain for a while. How does one go about doing that?

Sunday, November 06, 2005

33

Last weekend, a very dear man who I didn't know very well, but who nevertheless had a fairly big impact on my psyche, died in a car accident. After I heard the news last Saturday night I was very preoccupied with it for some days. I was saddened by the gaping hole his death leaves in the world, and the impact his permanent absence, which so abruptly replaces his absolute presence, will have on the lives of his wife and baby daughter, as well as his many friends.

I realized that death really scares me.

I'm not so arrogant as to think that I'm alone in this: quite the contrary. I'm a conscious person, a consumer of art and literature, a thinking person who interacts with others, and I know that the fear of death shapes and surrounds many things that many people do and create and think about. Most of the time, the fact of our own deaths or those of the people around us just kind of hangs out in the background, nudging us or twinkling our brains, but not existing front and centre. If it did, we'd probably all be paralyzed by fear every minute. And I think I've been feeling a little of that this past week, because the fact of this wonderful person's cruel and sudden departure from this world has drawn the idea of death out of the shadows and into the light.

I'm afraid of dying. I'm afraid of the impact that my death would have on the people around me, particularly my daughter. I'm afraid that after I die I'll experience some kind of agony of being aware of her feeling sad and afraid and lonely and I'll have no way of helping her. As I write this, I feel like it sounds like I'm on some kind of power or ego trip...how can I be so sure anyone would even care if I died? Or else that it's just my inner control freak: the thing that I fear is my inability to influence or be involved. Well, probably there is something to that. But that doesn't make it less genuine or legitimate, does it?

When I learned that my friend was 33 years old when he died, I thought of Brian. He was another beautiful person who died suddenly at age 33. He was the first person, the first peer of mine, who was really close to me, who died. I've had family members die: grandparents, great-grandparents, but never a person I'd loved deeply and tenderly, someone I'd been close to and intimate with. When he died, we'd only recently been back in touch with each other after a long absence, and his renewed presence in my life was at that time acting as a catalyst for me to fix some other things that I really needed to change in order to get out of a very bad rut. I was starting to feel hopeful, and good about myself, for the first time in a long time. I was realizing that I could feel love, and that I deserved to be loved, and more importantly, that I was not feeling it or living it even though I thought I was. It was some big stuff. And then he was unceremoniously yanked from this plane, and I was immeasurably bereft, but had no place to express my grief. It was agonizing.

At times like these, people often resort to cheesy platitudes, often with a religious flavour. Things like, "he was too good for this world, and [insert supreme being here] has called him back." And you start hearing about things like the good life on this plane paying off in the Hereafter. Stuff I would normally think was utter bullshit. But when the grief and confusion, the injustice of it, are bearing down on my soul, I find even my own, normally pragmatic self resorting to them. I actually found myself thinking some of those things this past week or so, and when there is no comfort to be had, I turn my hopeful ears to what sounds like some solid philosophy, something that has some suggestion of an explanation for what really makes no sense at all. I found myself remembering that Jesus was said to have died at age 33. As if that means something.

I suppose that through this senseless death, of a superior human whose impact on the world will reverberate for many lifetimes to come, I am revisiting that other tragic loss, and I am facing that which scares me the very most. Yet even as I write this I feel other things crowding in to the recesses of my mind: my daughter's head cold, my messy kitchen, my own wonderful partner. I know that this, too, shall pass, if only because I am living my life and seeking out pleasures and challenges without feeling sad and afraid. I do it every day.