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25603. Ms. No - 8/25/2009 8:08:45 AM

how 'bout now?

25604. Dubai Vol - 8/25/2009 9:09:50 AM

Augh! Sorry. Preview is my friend, preview is my friend....

My aunt is out of town at an artists' workshop, so my uncle and cousin and I are baching it. Nice to have a kitchen and people to cook for again. Still getting used to the oven, but got a decent pizza crust out of it at last. Also nice to be saving my uncle some money, as he doesn't cook at all and would be out every night otherwise.

25605. iiibbb - 8/25/2009 1:34:56 PM

I have fond memories of Knoxville.

25606. iiibbb - 8/25/2009 2:25:26 PM

What a strange morning.

My wife is starting to feel guilty about "making" me leave my job since I haven't gotten one yet. Although I have had a few panic attacks about it, now's not the time to panic about it; still, she feels guilty. On one hand I'm glad that she's feeling this, on the other I wish she'd given me a little of this recognition and understanding while we were in MS.

However, at the end of the day MS was not sustainable so I don't really have regrets leaving. I told her that if things in MS didn't work out that I would leave with a happy heart. I'm not sure how much of it she believed then, and maybe the way I'm taking the current situation makes her think she should have tried harder there.

When I'm feeling really bad about the present there is a small, secret kernel that thinks she could have tried harder in MS. I sometimes feel that she forced some decisions that would have better been deferred if we though MS would only last 18 months (which we did have a certain inkling of that).

I really hate having that thought because I think it takes away from what I'm trying to do for her career. At the end of the day MS was unworkable. She had a job there, but she didn't.

What bugs me now is that she's been working with her current boss for the past 3 years, but now that they're in the same place there seems to be some friction developing. Most of it is due to the fact that her boss, a very nice person, is a bit of a micro-manager and is going through a very serious life problem right now and is not able to devote the kind of attention to the work as she ought to, but still wants to micro manage. This kind-of drives my wife a little nuts. Hopefully she's not having buyer's remorse. She has to be in this job for 12 months or else we have to pay the moving money back. We're not going to do that.

Where's that leave me?

Nowhere new. I need to find a job. It needs to be good enough to put on a CV. I think I will find one, but it's taking some time. I just wish it would happen sooner rather than later.

She won't let me take a part time job... she says the guilt would be so great she couldn't look me in the eye. I hate that she feels the pressure that way. It seems to me the individuals in her clan make a lot of decisions out of guilt or defiance. I'd like to think being with me has diminished that a little bit, but that's 40 years of programming vs. 3 years of marriage.


The one personal resolution I think I will make because of this experience... I had gotten kind-of comfortable in my jobs and did my share of goofing off because so much of it came natural. I think this is going to snap me back into focus. If I've got some on-job downtime from now on, I'm going to use it to expand my skillset instead of shooting the shit with someone down the hall.

25607. iiibbb - 8/25/2009 4:24:43 PM

I can't talk to anyone in real life about this stuff...

25608. alistairconnor - 8/25/2009 4:55:56 PM

It seems to me the individuals in her clan make a lot of decisions out of guilt or defiance.

I've been dealing with similar cultural characteristics... in my girlfriend's case, I think of it as pride (though the French term, "orgueil", is stronger). It takes some adjusting to... it's impossible to fight, in my experience.

25609. iiibbb - 8/25/2009 4:56:12 PM

Another thought... in all of this... the only time she really hurt my feelings is when she told me I was too "risk adverse" when I was considering staying in that job until we sold the house.

I'm leaving my job for her and I'm "risk adverse".

As it turns out I'm happy I didn't stay because the house turned out to be so hard to sell this year... and we wouldn't have a baby on the way...

... but that stung.

Taking the job in MS in the first place was a big risk.

25610. judithathome - 8/25/2009 6:26:28 PM

Going there in the first place should dispell any idea that you are the least risk adverse!!

25611. iiibbb - 8/25/2009 8:18:29 PM

Message # 25608

You are right, it is impossible to fight... particularly in the heat of the moment. Things also tend to simmer with me (I am slow to rile), I don't like keeping score, and I don't like resurrecting old arguments. I especially don't want to make any part of my life trying to prove my wife is wrong about something that has come and gone.

The other half of the issue is for all of her "orgueil", I am her measure in "sisu"... which is the Finnish characteristic of doing hard things because they're right, and not because you expect to get any reward or comfort for doing it; you fully expect not to.

At the end of the day, my wife is fair, it just takes here a while to process things and reach the right conclusion. I lost a lot of clout moving down there, but I've gain a lot of it back putting myself in this position. So we're are the stronger for all of this.

Assuming I get a job.

Which still stresses me out.

25612. Ms. No - 8/26/2009 3:10:09 AM

i3b3,

The people we love and who love us fuck up sometimes. I don't think it's disloyal to say that your wife could have tried harder to stick it out in MS for awhile. I imagine that's the main reason for her feelings of guilt right now - she knows that unlike the move to MS, the move away was accomplished in haste because of her displeasure rather than because it was the best move to make at the time.

She's probably also got guilt because you're not complaining more about it and she thinks you were merely placating her when you said you were okay with this move. It's the kind of communication thing that probably won't happen once you guys have been married another couple of years.

Then there's the very real turning of the tables that she's experiencing now where she gets to realize that all that time in MS when she was miserable, you weren't just blithely going about your job without a care. When the people you love are unhappy, you hurt for them. She hurts for you because you're not fulfilled right now and it brings home to her the fact that you hurt for her in MS and she was too wrapped up in her own dilemma to really believe that.

So, she's doing a little growing up and readjustment. Like Martha says, it's a good thing.

You're stressed now, but you will find work, and you've got what looks like good strategies about going forward in your career -- not least of which is blowing off some steam in the Mote when you need to relieve pressure. ;->

25613. judithathome - 8/26/2009 5:42:55 PM

Also, don't forget her hormones are in a virtual war right now...that can do a lot to a woman and not being used to being pregnant, she may not understand that.

25614. alistairConnor - 8/26/2009 10:12:32 PM

Ye gods, I'd forgotten about the hormones. Roller coaster.

25615. Dubai Vol - 8/26/2009 10:20:03 PM

Oh yeah, when my first wife was 8 months pregnant, I came home to find all my clothes in the yard, with my dress uniform on the bottom.

25616. iiibbb - 8/27/2009 4:17:29 PM

Blechy day. I'm trying to force myself to apply to two jobs that I don't think I have much chance of getting. These are 1-pg resume jobs, so I'm not enthusiastic.

I am finding a couple of things on my CV I want to change. I tweaked the hell out of trying to angle for an EPA job that fell through. For all the improvements that I made in the overall presentation of it, there are a bunch of akward phrases that were really geared to that job, and I guess my last shot at culling them to bring it back to a general resume didn't get them all.

Sigh.

25617. vonKreedon - 8/27/2009 4:53:31 PM

Regarding your resume, my suggestion is to have a boiler plate version of your resume and then save this as a new file for each job you apply for and tweak those versions to the job.

25618. iiibbb - 8/28/2009 4:05:42 AM

I ordered a new computer today. Mine has been on the fritz and I'm scared the power supply is on it's last leg... turn it on and nothing spins up. Eventually it will, but it's scared me enough.

It's such an old laptop that all of these new fangled netbooks. I know they're pretty limited on performance, but they actually outperform my current laptop. I went with the bigger screen (about the size of a sheet of paper) and nearly full size keyboard, but it's still costs half as much as a laptop. Only weighs 3 lbs.

25619. alistairconnor - 8/28/2009 4:39:34 PM

mmm running windows?

A real "netbook" should be running some flavour of Unix, or that new-fangled Google thing.

We bought a pretty cool computer for my stepson for his birthday. About four inches by two and a half. Tactile screen. The young folks call it an "ipod".

25620. iiibbb - 8/28/2009 6:04:52 PM

Unfortunately I need windoze. I'll have xp. I might make it a dual boot later.

25621. alistairconnor - 8/28/2009 6:19:07 PM

I put a 120 Gb disk in my old laptop, I saved a partition for perhaps a Linux distro, if I ever get around to it.

In other news, I have approximately one hundred and twenty chigger bites.

25622. iiibbb - 8/28/2009 6:49:07 PM

Chigger fun

I hate the bastards. I use clothes with permethrin treatment when I work in the woods.

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