(no subject)
Mar. 30th, 2012 12:31 pmI think I work harder on Fridays than possibly any other day of the week. Friday is the only day where I switch my computer off before going home -- the rest of the time I just lock it and turn off the monitors -- so Friday is the day I have to deal with anything still sitting in my browser, and the day I choose to deal with any work-email backlog.
It's also the day I take care of the week's financials, which went smoothly this week except for where I got yelled at by Financial Services. But that happens often enough I'm pretty inured to it. I think they just like yelling, and I'm a good person to yell at because I don't take it a) personally or b) seriously. I'm sorry, I cannot bring myself to believe accounting is as important as they do, it's not in my nature. I'm a free spirit, man.
I've been looking around for professional development opportunities, because everyone else gets to go to a research conference later this year and I feel like I should be developing or whatnot, but my job is a weird mix of Project Manager, which is my title but significantly different from most positions like this, and Administrative Professional, which I do but not exclusively or nearly to the degree other Admins seem to, and I'm not quiiiite a researcher...so it's a puzzlement.
Also -- okay, I haven't done well in getting into video games but I've managed to get into comics which is like a few degrees off -- and if you aren't a Spider-Man fan or even a comic book fan, I still can't recommend Avenging Spider-Man #5 highly enough. It just came out this week and it's a standalone story; it's got the requisite fight scenes, but it's mostly about being a geek, coping with being made to feel ashamed of geekiness, how to be proud of it, and how it never really leaves you and that shouldn't be something you regret. It is at once the saddest and happiest story I've read in some time, in any medium.

Spider-Man just wants to be dork friends with you, Cap!
And if you ARE a comic book fan, I have to say, the writing in Avenging Spider-Man in general I've found to be above par. It's not quite so dark as many adult comics, but it's not hideously condescending like most of the comics aimed at teens and kids. Full Sam The Storyteller approval!
It's also the day I take care of the week's financials, which went smoothly this week except for where I got yelled at by Financial Services. But that happens often enough I'm pretty inured to it. I think they just like yelling, and I'm a good person to yell at because I don't take it a) personally or b) seriously. I'm sorry, I cannot bring myself to believe accounting is as important as they do, it's not in my nature. I'm a free spirit, man.
I've been looking around for professional development opportunities, because everyone else gets to go to a research conference later this year and I feel like I should be developing or whatnot, but my job is a weird mix of Project Manager, which is my title but significantly different from most positions like this, and Administrative Professional, which I do but not exclusively or nearly to the degree other Admins seem to, and I'm not quiiiite a researcher...so it's a puzzlement.
Also -- okay, I haven't done well in getting into video games but I've managed to get into comics which is like a few degrees off -- and if you aren't a Spider-Man fan or even a comic book fan, I still can't recommend Avenging Spider-Man #5 highly enough. It just came out this week and it's a standalone story; it's got the requisite fight scenes, but it's mostly about being a geek, coping with being made to feel ashamed of geekiness, how to be proud of it, and how it never really leaves you and that shouldn't be something you regret. It is at once the saddest and happiest story I've read in some time, in any medium.
Spider-Man just wants to be dork friends with you, Cap!
And if you ARE a comic book fan, I have to say, the writing in Avenging Spider-Man in general I've found to be above par. It's not quite so dark as many adult comics, but it's not hideously condescending like most of the comics aimed at teens and kids. Full Sam The Storyteller approval!