Work

Tuesday, 15 July 2008

Regular posting and/or writing

Clearly that regular posting thing has gone down the gurgler (is that the word?) since I went back to work.

Also I haven't yet sat myself down to plan out a regular writing time, much less sat myself down to write. However, I am getting there. In the psychology of change talk I think I'm in the contemplation phase (after pre-contemplation, but not yet on to planning, much less action).

I've been back at work two weeks now. This will be the third week (started Wednesday, because Monday and Tuesday are devoted to unpaid house and parenting work). I think maybe next week will be one to get serious about making time to write again. Next week.

Friday, 04 July 2008

Back in the workforce

I feel I should be blogging about the Garnaut Report today, but I haven't got the detail of it yet, and besides I'm sure there are many, many other people doing it better than I could.

So instead I'm going to blog about my new job. I started back to work in the public service this Wednesday. I'm still officially working for my old area (that is, they're paying for me), but I'm located in a different area. It's web work basically. Initially it looked like it would be more writing and editing, but it looks like it might end up being more the technical side of things, though perhaps with some editing, or at least providing advice about writing for the web.

And that's okay with me, because I'm going to be learning new stuff. Yesterday, for instance, I learned some new things about coding in XHTML (strict) which I haven't done before. Also the main website I'm going to be working on is in a content management system which I haven't used before, and the intranet (managed by the same area) uses SharePoint, which I also haven't used before.

More importantly even than the work, the team appears to be fairly together. By that I mean they seem to like each other, they're interesting people, and I think they'll be fun to work with. My last team was peopled with lovely people, but was nonetheless rather dysfunctional - most people didn't seem to want to be there. I think this is going to be quite different. There are also a number of other part-timers in the team, which is a good sign. I've only spent a day and half in their company, so I could be wrong about this team. But I don't think I am.

When I was studying psychology in year eleven, I remember reading that people's beliefs tend to match their behaviour to the extent that if you manage to change someone's behaviour their belief system will usually follow.

I've been back at work three days, and already I can see that working on me. I think I might just like working. True, it costs me the time I've spent writing over the past year. And if someone would pay me to sit in my study and write - write the stuff I want to - than yes, I would choose that. But you know, there's something rather pleasant about getting out of the house, getting to dress-up a bit, maybe even put on some makeup (though I predict that won't last another week) and be with other people.

Another nice thing is that while I was on leave the function of government I work under was moved from one department to another. So I am working in a new department, and of all the departments there are, it is probably the one I would choose. (The one I was in wasn't bad, but only because of the function that came across to the new department*, and even so, I didn't feel quite as at home there as I think I will here.) And now I am working in the main part of the department, so that potentially opens up opportunities to move into other areas at a later time.

And so, for the first time really in years I can see myself starting to think of this as a potential career, rather than just a job. So much, I think, depends on the team you find yourself in. I hope this one goes on as well as it has started.

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*Sorry about the confusing code, I don't want to actually mention department names. Though anyone from my team who read this would immediately know who I am, so I'm not sure why I am so careful. It's just my policy.

Friday, 30 May 2008

In mourning already

Even though I have very much been looking forward to having my master's project completed, so that we could have family weekends (or at least family days) again, so that we could get some things done around here, the fact is, I am really going to miss my writing time.

I comfort myself with the knowledge that I'll be going back to work in July and that could be interesting and challenging, and will still give me some days (two and a half hopefully) away from the monotony of housework and building cubbies, which quite frankly, I need for my sanity On the other hand it could also suck - it mostly depends on the people I end up working with, individually and as a team. And as yet, I don't know who they will be, or even what work I will be doing. If it's back to the job I left two years ago then the work will be relatively enjoyable - writing and editing and reading about art and culture and recreation in Australia. So that's not all bad. As to the people I don't know. I know the team has changed significantly since I left.

However, regardless of how that job works out (and in all honesty if I could avoid going back to work I would, despite what I just said about sanity), it's not going to be the same as having two days a week to focus on my own writing project/s. Granted, most of the past year I have been focussed on this masters project, which is also not the same as having two days a week to focus on whatever writing project I want, but - it almost is. If I had another year to work in here (without the requirements of a university course) I would probably focus on something a mite more practical than an academic essay - perhaps freelance articles, perhaps turning the fiction part of my project into a novel, or perhaps one of the other novels that are ticking away in my head. But I don't have another year, so whichever of those things I want to focus on (probably the first), I'm going to have to do it in my copious spare time.

Yeah, I am really, really, going to miss my writing days.

Still, the money's going to be nice.

Wednesday, 14 May 2008

The non-post, which quickly became Me Rabbiting On

From the claytons post direct to the non-post, and I haven't made it two weeks of posting every day yet. I wonder if this spells doom of my plans to make it through the entire month?

Two people I know IRL and one online (but not through blogging) are currently pregnant and happy about it - two via IVF one via an accident (though they were planning to start trying within a couple of months, just hadn't quite got there yet).

I am tired tired tired. Yet the idea of having a newborn in the house does not fill me with dread. Maybe that's just because I'm too tired to feel dread. Actually, I wouldn't want to have one right now. Kaely is not quite two and still seems waaay to young to me to introduce another baby into the house. All those people who have the second when their first is under two (or even under three, truth be told) are amazing to me. How they manage, but more than that, how they can even contemplate having another one early enough to have produced another one that quickly is totally beyond me.

Kaely is seeming quite a bit better, by the way, but still very grumpy.

I went to pilates tonight. I've been doing it since about three months before we started trying to get pregnant with Mikaela. I told my cousin (after her second baby in as many years) that doing pilates is just a price of having children and really must be done. A very middle class perspective.

I start back at work in only about 6 or 7 weeks. Seven I guess. Not sure how I feel about that yet, but it will be for a different government department than the one I left, because of the shuffling of portfolios with the new government, so that's sort of exciting. Or perhaps exciting is too strong a word, but you know what I mean I'm sure.

Liam's school has it's annual Autumn picnic this Sunday, but I can't go because I'll be writing. The deadline approacheth fast. I'm also missing one of his best friend's birthday parties the following week for the second or third year in the row for the same reason.

And now that I have rabbited on and on I am going to bed.

Friday, 08 September 2006

Rolfing ACT

Chris's Rolfing website is finally live, after having a 'be back soon' type sign on it for, oh, I don't know - three years maybe? But to be fair, he's been pretty busy in that time (and so have I, more to the point), and hasn't really had any need to promote himself. Now, however, he does. He needs to build up to three full days of Rolfing by the time my half-pay maternity leave runs out - ie early November - or face going full time in the public service.

As the only rolfer in Canberra, he does have kind of a corner on the market, but the downside of that is that most Canberran's have never heard of rolfing.

So here it is: Rolfing ACT, the website of Canberra's Number One Rolfer! Proudly produced using (free) blogging software :) Feel free to read it, link to it, promote it, even come for a session. And since most Canberran's don't know what rolfing is, and I'd even go so far as to guess most Australian's don't, here's your chance to ask any questions you might have. In fact, if anyone really does have a question, pop it in the comments and I will prevail upon Chris to write a guest post.

Monday, 12 June 2006

The planting of Liam's apple tree

When I left work a few weeks ago (two? three? it seems like a lifetime ago already) my lovely colleagues bought me some gifts. They cleverly called Chris for ideas (found his mobile number on his so-called website) and ended up buying an apple tree and a bookshop gift voucher. The voucher I am greedily saving for now; I'm always like that with vouchers. But the apple tree we just planted out - over Liam's four-and-a-bit year old placenta.

Yep, it's been sitting in the freezer all this time, waiting for us to buy an apple tree. So while on the one hand it seems slightly odd to use the apple tree that was bought as a gift for me because of the baby I shall soon give birth too, it also seems most appropriate that Liam's placenta should be planted out before the next one arrives. And it was nice that he is old enough to have some idea of what we were on about. So that apple tree, while it was bought as a gift for me, will henceforth be known as Liam's apple tree.

May it bear loads and loads of fruit and bring great blessings to the world - just as Liam is already doing.

Wednesday, 24 May 2006

The meaning of bliss

I am now on maternity leave. Yippee!!!

Friday, 19 May 2006

Aaargh - still sick!

Friday, and I haven't been to work all week. I even went so far as going to see my GP yesterday, to make sure it hadn't developed into some nasty secondary bacterial infection, but he said no, just viral. Rest/drink fluids etc.

Not that I mind not going to work really, but given that next Wednesday is my last day before mat leave, there are probably a few things I should be finialising this week. And I had a couple of days off last week too (for an unrelated reason).

And really, if I'm going to be off work, I'd rather be healthy and writing or doing something else useful (or fun). But it doesn't work that way of course.

I did speak to my herbalist today and she is mixing me up a batch of pregnancy safe mucas-removal herbs, so I'll go out shortly to pick those up. Hopefully I'll be better by Monday.

Tuesday, 16 May 2006

The dreaded lurgy, or, Getting ready part II - all the things that are not going to be done in time!

It's my second last week of work before mat leave and I'm off sick. About which I do feel a little guilty, but what can you do? At dinner on Friday night I started to notice a slight tickle in my throat and within two hours I was completely gone.

On Sunday I was feeling better already, and got up (though admittedly late) on Monday morning with every intention of going to work.  I was half way there before I realised what an idiot I was being, and turned around and came home. Just as well because by Monday afternoon I felt completely like crap again. And aside from anything else I do hate it when other people bring their nasty germs into work and spread them around.

On the upside for the weekend, I did complete a second draft of that story I wrote for uni - the one I thought maybe wasn't worth continuing with - and I'm pretty happy with it now (did most of that on Sunday). Which is just as well since my deadline was for this coming Sunday, and I still have to finalise the other assignment too, although I think it's mostly okay as is.

This is particularly good because I've been starting to feel quite stressed lately about all my self-imposed deadlines. In my head I need to have everything done not just before the baby comes, but before I go on maternity leave (ie Thursday next week). Everything being: the story & paper for uni; a clean house (ha!) and clean and tidy bedroom - my plan being not to get out of bed (this time) in the first days after the baby's born just because someone (say the midwife) is coming over*; all the baby clothes dug out of boxes, washed and placed in drawers (I've done some of this, but I'm sure there must be another box somewhere); the two boxes of stuff that came out of the hallway closet recently (before we had shelves put in) either repatriated with the closet or thrown/given away; the last year or so of filing done, and our financial books got up to date, so that we can do next year's taxes easily and simply early in the new financial year.

There's probably more, but that is a good portion of it.** And you know what, the filing/book-keeping stuff is still stressing me, but the rest of it not so much. Maybe it's because I'm sick and so I just don't care, but I think it's because I've got the uni stuff under control, and that was the main worry. And especially that I'm relatively happy with the story which a week ago I thought might be unworkably bad.

I'd still like to do all those other things, and in addition I'd like to finish a different story and submit it to Literary Mama's 'Desiring Motherhood' issue (deadline is the end of June), but you know what? Most of it probably won't happen. Because the fact is my 'before mat leave' deadline, while somewhat aribitary (chances are the baby won't come for another four or more weeks after that), was also sort of real. In fact it's still nearly two weeks away, but already I am incapable of doing a lot of that stuff - especially anything involving bending/lifting - even filing - without a lot of the belly pain I mentioned. Plus there's the fact that Chris may be away the Sunday-Monday after I go on mat leave, and will be away the following weekend.

But right now I think that's all okay. As long as the filing/bookkeeping gets done (and I must admit that is a big if) everything else will be okay. In fact, I'm rather over getting ready now. If it weren't for the fact that of course I don't want my baby to be premature, I'd be hoping for contractions to start any minute. I am beyond ready.

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*Which isn't to say I won't get out of bed at all, just that last time I missed out on naps I could have had, because I felt the insane need to be up and dressed just because someone might be coming over.

**Of course there's more: I haven't written out a birth plan or bought a baby book yet (or indeed seen one that I would be remotely willing to use), I haven't got a present ready for Liam to celebrate the birth of 'his' baby, I haven't even called the woman I've been meaning to talk to about a refresher in hypnobirthing/calm birthing... there's heaps more.

Sunday, 09 October 2005

Not writing - the whys and wherefores

Now that I am working in a job I really enjoy again, and am newly re-obsessed with the garden/permaculture/the very cute chooks, I get why I didn't do much serious writing for the few years before Liam was born. We spent five years living in a completely new house with *nothing* in the garden except shale and clay when we moved in. We did a lot of gardening, and especially talking about gardening. In other words, I had another obsession to occupy my weekends and more importantly, my reading/planning/thoughts.

But perhaps more importantly, I also had a job I enjoyed, at least for the most part. Or a couple of different jobs actually, since I did a complete career change about two years before Liam was born. So I didn't have that sense of urgency about developing a different career as a freelance writer.

Okay, there were other factors too, like maybe I didn't take myself very seriously, and maybe I really did kind of believe that I would have *more* time after kids, at least when I was on mat leave (I know, what a fool). But enjoying my job and obsession with my garden are certainly enough to keep me from writing much this time around. But then, it's Spring. Give me a few months, I'm bound to get over it again.

(Got a reminder message from NaNoWriMo the other day - was planning to do it if I wasn't pregnant by then - I'm not (17 months of trying, but who's counting?), but I am undecided about whether or not to go ahead.)

Thursday, 22 September 2005

Writing/working balance

Last week my best friend wrote to me in response to a whiney email I had sent her, and she said

Would it be doable for you right now just to assume these next months (weeks?  year?) is just for letting life settle down, and to follow your desires (like for getting back into the garden) without having to have a master plan mapped out.  Just assume that you'll write when/if you want, will garden, hang out w/ Liam, enjoy Chris, get healthy, get comfortable in your new work and that is absolutely more than enough.  And, then just wait until the big picture comes into better focus?

My response: Are you kidding me?

But seriously, I decided she was right. Okay, maybe that wasn't so hard to work out. But it's not that I can really let go of the Master Plan - I don't need for it to be exactly accurate, but I do need to have some kind of ideal towards which I am working. But yeah, I am letting it be a bit more fuzzy than it was.

I decided that while I couldn't let this novel that I have almost completed slide entirely (because if I stop writing entirely it could take me another year - or years - to get started again), I can take out the silly self-imposed deadline and just let it happen when it happens. I think part of the stress/apathy I was feeling around it was the fact that as of this week I have lost my Wednesday writing times, which leaves Sunday as the only big chunk. And I just couldn't see how I'd get it done in the time I wanted with just Sundays - and trying to was going to ruin all my good Spring gardening time. Not to mention a big chunk of time I'd like to be spending with my family - Chris and Liam both.

So, as of last weekend I am cutting myself some slack. A lot of slack. I am going to try to write/revise each Sunday morning, while Liam is at swimming. That gives me an hour or two (as opposed to the 6-8 hour day I usually set myself for Sundays). And I'll try to do bits at other times, but without the pressure of any sort of quotas or deadlines.

Then on Monday I started my new job. And thanked my lucky stars that I'd sorted out my writing crisis first. Because this job is going to be flat out, I suspect without let up. At the very least it is going to take me some weeks to really settle in and catch up. I have a feeling it's really a full-time job posing as a part-time job, so I am going to have to set some pretty clear boundaries for myself and my manager.

BUT, I think it is going to be really fun. It's writing/reading/editing arts & culture oriented stuff. How cool is that? After the dry content of the last five years of writing, it is very cool, believe me. It is going to be busy busy busy, which after the last six months of sitting around with literarly nothing to do for entire days, I am pretty happy about. Plus, the atmostphere in the department is different (better? hard to tell but I think it will suit me better, yes), they are keen to give me training opportunities (whereas where I was they a) had no money most of the time, and b) didn't really bother about that sort of thing much, especially for part-timers like me. Although perhaps I am being a little hard on them, maybe it was more about the money. And general apathy, rather than specific), and there is good espresso coffee across the road for only $2 (which is very cheap).

Does this mean I am hoping to be in the public service for years to come? Not at all. But it does make the likely prospect of that happening a lot more appealing.

Monday, 19 September 2005

New job

First day of new job today. It was intense, but good. Most amazingly organised handover I've ever had. Am very tired. But happy. Such a relief to know there will be no more days of sitting around wondering how to occupy my time. The opposite maybe, but after the last six months I'm all for it. Also interesting, interesting content, instead of the boring, boring, boring stuff I've been working on.

So, tired but happy, I am off to collapse on the couch in front of the sexy Patrick Dempsey.

Sunday, 18 September 2005

Progress

I'm buggered.

Our new chook house is half built (of course, it was the easy half today, but we did clean up the chook yard-to-be as well), our vegetable garden is half laid (not planted out though, mostly that will have to wait until after the last frosts ie early November), our compost material  is half gathered, and our worm farm is completely moved.

And I spent two very productive hours working on revisions for my novel this morning.

All in all a thoroughly enjoyable Sunday. Which is just as well because tomorrow is the first day of my new job, the one that will have me at work on four different days (you know what I realised today? That means four different work outfits to come up with each week - ack!). So right now, it is time for bed.

Tuesday, 13 September 2005

Musing on jobs and careers and time

Today is my last day in my current job. I know I’ve changed jobs more than once since I started this blog, but this is a bigger change than most. Bigger than any since I left the massage college & clinic I used to run (as manager, not owner) back in February 2000... I’m not leaving the public service yet, but I am moving departments. And I suppose when you’ve been in the public service for twenty or thirty years and worked in 10 different departments, leaving one isn’t that big a deal. But this is the only one I’ve worked in, and I’ve been here for over five years. It’s a large department, and so many people stay here their whole working lives. They move from one area to another (or in some cases they don’t), but never really consider moving on to another department. It is quite well paid and has good conditions (I’m actually going to be slightly worse off under the agreement in my new department, although they will maintain my current salary), as well as being large enough to facilitate many moves.

But still – it’s not my cup of tea, and I’ve really only stayed as long as I have because of the break for maternity leave and then coming back part-time – it is a lot harder to find part-time positions than full-time ones.

So, today is my last day. It feels weird. Because I moved to this area only 6 months ago, having hovered around the same area for the previous four-and-a-half years, I don’t really know the people here all that well. But there will be some who I’ll miss working with – who I might have quite enjoyed working with if I’d stayed – and there will be people who I still see from my old area (a lot of them are still in this same building, though not all) who I’ll miss.

I should read back over my old journal from before I got pregnant with Liam, from the first 12 months I spent working here, and see if I wrote about my career ambitions back then. In that first twelve months I really enjoyed the work. I was on a steep learning curve, and I spent over six of those months ‘acting’ at a higher level. Had I not gone on maternity leave and come back part-time I would expect to have been at that level long since. My director said as much to me last year at my last performance appraisal. As it is, I really have no desire to go back to that point.

Then, I think, I was enjoying building networks, learning my way around, developing my knowledge in various areas. I think I was seeing the work I was doing and networks I was building as laying down the foundation for future promotions. I had hoped to be at the EL1* level permanently before I went on mat leave, but then right around the time I got pregnant the money dried up and there was a recruitment freeze. When my acting ran out, the area I’d been acting in wanted to transfer me permanently (at my real level, not the acting level) but the area who ‘owned’ me wouldn’t agree, because they wouldn’t be allowed to recruit someone to replace me.

Anyway, so back then I think I might have been thinking along the lines of staying the public service for quite a while. Not in this department – I was never going to make a career out of being here – but moving around to others. I wasn’t planning, at that stage, on doing the Masters, although I had always had further study as an idea at the back of my mind. I also wasn’t planning on writing romances, but I of course I had planned – only half jokingly – to write my first novel while I was on maternity leave with Liam. So I guess I was even then hoping that I would eventually be able to leave the public service to make a career out of writing. But I’m not sure how serious I was about that then.

Since then I’ve gotten very serious about it, but has it become any more realistic a goal? Doubtful, I suspect. So should I give up this dream, and just enjoy my weekends with my family, stop trying to fit two careers in around parenting, and focus on this new public service job? It’s a writing job, after all, not fiction writing, but should still be rather more interesting than any of the writing I’ve been doing in my various positions in this department, even writing and editing the internal e-magazine, which I did for a long time. I’m sure that it will be challenging and skills-expanding. You know, the truth is, if they would let me work 16 hours a week – 2 days – I might consider it. Of course, if they would let me do that I would also have more time to spend on extra-curricular writing without it impacting so much on my family life. That’s what I was doing when I first came back from mat leave, and it really was much more bearable.

How do people spend their whole working lives doing 35-40 hours a week on jobs that don’t inspire them? How do they survive with the years stretching out ahead of them in which working will take the main part of their time? I mean, I get it if they are doing something they love and are motivated by – even if they then do 60 or 80 hours a week (not that that would ever be me) but if not… and especially for people with children. We really want to have another child, and if that works out we actually think we’d like another one after that. But there is part of me that knows that the more children we have the more we will be feeling these time pressures. We want to be able to be there for them after school, to go with them to sports of whatever activities they choose, to spend time helping out in each of their classrooms. Not to mention that we want to be at home with each kid before they start school, we don’t want them to be in formal childcare at all, if possible. And the more kids we have, the more time all that will take – which would be fine, if it weren’t for the fact that the more kids we have the more money we will need to support them, and therefore the more work we will need to do. I hate the idea of deciding how many children to have based on economics, but it may work out that way.. Then again the way it’s been going that may all be a moot point, we might not get to choose at all.

But back to the career ambitions. I’m sure that part of my current ambivalence to writing is to do with the fact that I haven’t really taken the revision of the novel in hand, and procrastination always makes me miserable. Part of it is to do with the fact that it is Spring, and I really want to be outside getting things happening in the garden. Back when we lived in a brand new house in Ngunnawal (on the other side of Canberra) gardening took up a big chunk of the time that could have been used for writing, but I didn’t mind back then. I did bits of writing here and there, but didn’t have a routine of writing – or only journal/letter writing, which somehow is easier to fit in without a strict routine (especially when you are sans kids, which of course we were back then). We had no garden to begin with, just dirt and clay, so getting a garden happening was a priority. Plus we were filled with dreams of semi-self sufficiency, so we got the vegie gardens happening first, then the native shrubs to attract birds, and the apple tree of course. And then the chooks.

And now all those feelings are coming back.

If there is one regret I have about my past it is that I didn’t do the work to establish myself as a writer (or establish that it was never going to happen) back when I had so much more time – back before children. I certainly wouldn’t have wanted to put off becoming a mother any longer than I did – Liam was born when I was 30, and time’s getting on now with no second child on the way – but I wish I’d done more in that time before he was born. Of course I was doing other things – working long hours, saving money, travelling, growing a garden. But I also spent a lot of time doing nothing – sitting around watching TV, day dreaming, doing I don’t know what.

Then again, regrets are a waste of energy. I was doing and learning and imagining things then that have contributed to making me the person I am now. But I don’t want to look back in another decade and wish that I had spent more time establishing myself as a writer now. Of course, I also don’t want to look back and wish I had spent more time with Liam…

So do I have any resolution here? Not really, aside from the fact that a 6 week holiday at the beach would be nice. I think maybe I need to cut myself some slack, let the gardening happen, let my body continue to recover from all the illness of the last few months (did I mention that I got a cold, right before going back to work last week? And I haven’t fully shaken it yet – what is with my body this year?) and just not push myself so hard. But then I think I really only have Sundays for solid writing now. After this week I won’t have Wednesdays anymore. I can’t cut it back any further or I won’t be doing any. But the days are getting longer, and though I will be working more days in my new job, they will be shorter days. So maybe I can enjoy my afternoons with Liam in the garden, and feel refreshed enough to focus on my revising novel on Sundays and the odd evening.

And, I have a new job to begin next week, and they do say a change is as good as a holiday.

*EL1=Executive Level 1 – a somewhat meaningless term that just means the next level up from the top APS level. I think a lot of the more heavy responsibility starts at the EL2 level (above which you get only the SES, Senior Executive Service), which I hope never to experience.

Tuesday, 23 August 2005

The exciting news

So, the exciting news I promised. Well, first, I've decided to defer from uni for the semester. That's not actually the exciting news, but I am pretty happy about it. After more weeks of sickness than health so far this semester, I was just about caught up on all the reading (but not quite all the writing) when I got appendicitis. While I probably *could* catch up, I don't think I could really do the assignments justice at this point. And to tell you the truth, I just can't face the stress of trying right now.

True, I am still somewhat dizzy and lightheaded on and off during the day (my GP, who I saw today, tells me this is normal) and sleeping like hell, so maybe it is not surprising that I don't feel like facing that stress right now, but, well, I really don't think I'm going to feel like it next week either.

This is a load off my mind, and also means I can go back to working on my novel. I'm not without mixed feelings about this - I was really enjoying the subject (Fiction writing B) and I really like some of the other people in the group who I got to know a little over the last semester, whereas when I come to do it again it will be a whole different group. Plus if I do end up getting pregnant sometime soon I will be deferring again for second semester next year (if not first) so won't be able to get back to this subject until second semester 2007. That's a long way away. And while I'm enjoying working on the novel, I really enjoy the more literary/experimental writing that this semester has been about. On the other hand, it will be nice to focus on the novel.

And, the lack of deadlines for a while will be really nice.

Plus, there's my exciting news. I got the job! Now, I realise this would come across as more exciting had I ever mentioned that I applied for a new job back in early-mid July. It's in a different (way more interesting, to me) department, in a job where I get to do writing and structural editing of articles again. There's actually someone - someone else - who will be paid to proofread the things I write. This is particularly good because in my current job, which I've been in since about March, I have proved to not only find copy-editing/proofing incredibly boring, but to be less than fabulous at it.

And, as if all that wasn't good enough, this is a permanent part-time position. So, no more wrangling over my hours every six months. That alone would have been enough to make me apply for it, had it been only ever so vaguely in my area of expertise. But the fact that it is directly in my line of work, with way more interesting content than I have had to work with in recent years, and part-time? Almost unbelievable.

So, I applied. Then when I was really sick a few weeks ago they called and asked to interview me. Fabulous. The day of the interview came and I was mostly better, but not quite. It was my first day back at work. Well, the interview went okay, but not great, and at that point I pretty much told myself to forget about it.

But, right when I was feeling really crappy after appendicitis, they called and offered me the job. Yippee. I am so outa that proofreading job.

The only downside is it's a couple more hours than I do now - that's not much, and still several less than my current job was set to rise to in January, but I think it will mean doing four short days instead of three long ones. My schedule is already so tight (having to get home in time for Chris to see his Rolfing clients), I just can't see how I can fit any more into it on those days. Which means my midweek writing day becomes a midweek working day. But see, that just confirms the rightness of my decision to defer. And I really don't mind so much, because I will still have Sunday writing time (and other bits and pieces fitted in here and there) and my work days will suddenly all be relatively short. Nice. And two and a half extra hours/week means slightly more money, which is never bad.

Yep, things are looking up. (Now, someone just tell that to the fertility gods...)

Sunday, 05 June 2005

Writing vs relaxing (or, can I quit my day job now, please?)

I wrote 1000 words on my romance novel today. The first words I've written on it since about week three of uni. I posted my last assignment (a 3000 word story) to uni on Tuesday and am now free of study for six weeks.

But I'm having trouble motivating myself to get back into the novel. My goal for today was 2000 words. I wrote 1000, then took a break, had lunch, spent an hour and a half on the phone to a friend (who I hadn't spoken to in two months), packed the dishwasher, made another cup of tea, read some of Romancing the Blog (that's work, right?), wrote an entry about Liam and chocolate, took a phone call from my sister...

It's not that I don't want to get back into the novel, it's more that I want a break. I feel like the last few weeks of uni were fairly intense. Earlier this week I was starting to feel really stressed again and desperate for a holiday, which I think had a lot to do with the fact that I'm not pregnant, some to do with the sudden realisation that although I did take time off work in November I had a miscarriage in the middle of it, so it wasn't exactly the refreshing break I'd hoped for, and some to do with struggling with the story I was working on for uni. Now I'm feeling better again, but also feeling like I deserve a break.

The thing is, most writers do it in their 'spare' time. They don't have someone say to them "Here. Take this half a million dollars, quit your job and use that time to write instead." - like I keep hoping someone will do for me. They do it late at night and at any other time they can. I get that. I get that I have to really work hard at it if I want to make it happen. I even get that the first novel I write (romance or otherwise) probably won't be worth publishing, and maybe not the next one, or the next one, or the one after that either. And I'm even mostly, sort of, okay with that.

But sometimes I just really want a break. And yet if I take a break now, I won't be able to really get back to this novel until the end of October, when I finish the next semester of uni. And by then, god willing, I will be pregnant and even more tired than I am now.

Actually, you know what I think really did it for me, what really made me depressed last weekend? Someone at work gave notice. She was on a contract that was due to expire at the end of June anyway, but she gave notice to leave early. This week will be her last. That reminded me that back in January I was saying that if I wasn't pregnant by April, or at the latest by June, I was going to resign. I was going to take this time as a gift and focus on writing, while I only have one child and he's old enough to farm out to other people a little bit.

But back in January I didn't have a position where I could stay part time  - twenty hours/week - until the end of December. Back in January I was being told that I was going to have to go full time. Now I have a job where I can stay twenty hours until the end of the year, and just add one day per week next January; a job which will eventually pay me 12 weeks of maternity leave (if I ever need it) and then allow me to take leave without pay until the baby is 66 weeks old; a job which I will then be allowed to return to and remain part time for at least two more years, but which will, if necessary, pay me another 12 weeks of maternity leave even if I only went back to work for a single day. So it would seem crazy to quit now, wouldn't it? The downside is that this job is incredibly boring. It is the most boring job I have ever had. And each day when I am there I can't help thinking that I could be studying, or I could be writing. It seems like such a waste of time. And, there is still no end in sight.

All the more reason, I know, to use every spare second really working on my writing. (Writing blog entries does not count). But somehow, I'd rather sit down with a cup of tea and a good book (hey, trashy romance novels can be good too) and just relax. Is that so wrong?

Sunday, 22 May 2005

What I am not blogging about

I have a whole lot of things to blog about, but I have been spending most of my time working on my story, my final assignment for the semester, which is due next week. And I have a cold. However, because this blog operates partly as memory jogger I am going to list, briefly, the topics I am not blogging about.

  1. Liam. He is going through an interesting and somewhat challenging developmental phase right now. And 'going through' is definitely the right terminology, because it is not a stationary thing, this phase. He definitely seems to be moving through something, and we along with him. There is a lot of calling people 'bad' ('you are a bad Daddy!') especially when they are taking my attention away from him. There is a lot of telling me (and also Chris, but mostly only if I'm not there) how much he loves me. There is an interesting tendency to preference Chris as night time comforter which has only begun in the last week. Even he seems to be confused by this. 
  2. Liam. I also have been meaning to write about his singing. He's always been very into singing, but lately he seems to have taken another leap forward in this. He used to sing along to Play School and to tapes in the car, but usually be a few lines behind. More and more he is singing right along with them. And more and more he is singing whole songs to himself at other times. He's always done this - sung in the bath, at the dinner table, in bed - but he's tending to sing longer songs now, or more of them, rather than just snatches. He knows songs that I don't, and today I heard a Play School song at a friend's house that I'd never heard before - except I new it word perfect from listening to Liam sing it at home.
  3. Writing - or more specifically revising. I am finding revising this story to be alternatively satisfying and frustrating; fun and depressing. It has made me realise that I have never really got to this point in my fiction writing before. No wonder I'm not published yet. And thank god for a deadline (I think).
  4. Homeschooling. I recently discovered that Dawn started blogging again latish last year, so I’ve been reading her back entries. Almost every time she has an entry about homeschooling/unschooling it makes me half want to do it. She had an entry in October about it, then in December she had a running conversation with some commenters about homeschooling.
    So I wanted to talk about why it appeals to me (mostly the kid-directed learning, though I have to admit the saving in school fees appeals too) and why I don’t think we’ll do it (partly because I’d be concerned about them missing out on the shared experience most of their peers will have and wondering how they’d cope when they eventually entered the mainstream system if they wanted to go to uni, and partly because I’d be terrified I’d stuff it up and ruin their lives. But also because there are a lot of things about being part of the Steiner school community that I think will be really great, and everyone I know who's kids are at Orana seem very happy with it. Also I don't know how much support there is for it here - far less, I would think, than in the States, but I admit I have done no research).
  5. Hmm, what else was there? Oh yes, work. I can’t remember where I left the work story most recently, but to sum up, I now have a position where I can stay at 20 hours/week until the end of the year, then go up by one day. I was still looking around for other things for a while, and came very close to getting a job I would have loved in a different department (the selection committee recommended me for the position, but then they ended up not filling it, at least for the moment), but… I have now decided to stay here.
    The reason I was still looking for something else is that this job promises to be unbelievably boring for a good deal of the time. It is mostly copyediting with a good deal of proof reading thrown in. On the other hand, staying here means that I get to stay at 20 hours which means I can keep studying next semester. If I got the other job I would have had to put my hours up by the extra day from July, in which case I would have deferred uni. I just don’t think it would be fair on Liam – or Chris - for me to be working virtually four days/week, plus studying on weekends. It’s bad enough as it is. (Actually, to tell the truth, the idea of having to quit studying for a while and thereby get my weekends back wasn’t so unappealing. But all in all I am happy that I will be putting my time and focus more into study than into the Public Service).
  6. And finally, last but not least, the Budget. What can I say? I am sure it has all been said already. I just don't get why there isn't more of a public response to the fact that, according to Costello & Howard, we can't afford to maintain the Medicare Safety Net as promised, among other things, and yet we can afford more tax cuts, predominately for the rich. As Bob Brown said (sorry, don't have a reference) "Spending on the nation's health, skills and environment when the money is abundant is much wiser and fairer than tax cuts loaded for the rich."

Sunday, 24 April 2005

What is it about writing?

Sometimes I have to ask myself, why am I doing this? Why am I spending my weekends studying? Why am I planning to spend my mid-year six week break from uni working on a romance novel?

Why not just stick with my day job - currently 20 hours/week editing publications in a government department - and spend my weekends with my family?

Okay, I kinda know the answer. Because my 20 hour/week job editing is often unbelievably boring. Because I love to write and would love to make a career out of writing that doesn't involve copyediting technical government publications. Because I may not always be able to stay part time in the public service, even in this mindnumbing position. And even if I could, it may send me crazy if I didn't know I had something else going on too.

But. I am going to be keeping my boring day job for the foreseeable future whether or not I waste my weekends studying. And making a career out of fiction writing is rather more easily said than done. Making one that pays the bills is even harder, and even more so for literary fiction than romance.

At the moment my plan is to finish Fction Witing A & B, worth a point each, this year (I'm taking A now). Next year or maybe the year after (if I manage to have a baby next year) I plan to enrol in a four point, year long subject which involves about 16000-18000 words of creative writing plus a 2-3000 word exegetical essay. Something like that.

But. If I wanted to I could instead do a one point, one semester course in editing (which I would love to do as well anyway, and which would be much more sensible public service career-wise) and leave it at that - that would be enough for me to finish this Masters. And I could then focus solely on the romance writing, when I'm not editing boring pubs for the government.

Or, I could simply stop studying, stop worrying about writing a romance novel (or just do bits of it when Liam is taking naps on week days) and have my weekends back.

Instead I am at home, supposedly working on the story I have due next for uni, while Chris and Liam are playing in the sun at Commonwealth Park. Why am I like this?

Tuesday, 22 February 2005

Good news. Very good news

It seems I have finally snaffled myself a sideways move to another job. Woohoo! And in this job, I shall be able to stay working at my current hours until the end of the year.  After that they'll want me to increase my hours, but not to full time even then.

The offer came yesterday, and needless to say I snaffled it up immediately.  I am counting my chickens a little here, because nothing is in writing and a release date is still to be negotiated (ie when my present director will release me from my current position) but it will probably be only two weeks away.

It's still in the same department, still working as an editor (not so much writing though in this new position, but that's okay I am doing plenty of that at home - more than ever in fact), but in a completely different area. And I am nearly as excited about that as about getting to stay part time without a fight.  Well, without any more of a fight. I have been in my current area for TOO LONG.

I will be very sad if this doesn't come off, now that I have announced it to all the world, but I do think it will.

Tuesday, 07 December 2004

Update on my mental health

Last week: Lovely.  Still had tightness of chest/shallow breathing on occasion, more as the week wore on, but overall I felt quite good and relaxed.

Since then: Not so great.  What is it about going to work that sends me into a spin and closes my lungs up?

Sunday afternoon: (may or may not be mental health related) on the way home from a Canberra bloggers BBQ, sitting in passenger seat of car, suddenly had a feeling of wheeziness followed by my vision almost blacking out. It felt like when I fainted when I was pregnant, except I didn't faint. (don't think this was anything to do with the BBQ, by the way, which was great - thanks Zoe - I will get around to blogging about it soon)

Also had a few moments of wheeziness the day before, walking around at Wamboin and had it on and off all day Monday at work.

Monday: Went to work. Wished I had taken my doctor up on his suggestion of two weeks off, not just one. Was almost in tears several times during the day (OK, there were tears, but not sobs, not real crying) mostly when someone showed sympathy over the miscarriage. Had restricted breathing from some time early that day (but not until after I got to work I'm pretty sure) and all the way home in the car.  Couldn't breath in far enough. Suddenly noticed at around 7:30pm that I could breath relatively normally again - felt like my chest was still tight, but I could take full breaths in.

Monday night: more crying. This was not about the miscarriage. Talked to Chris about what I loser I feel like.  How ridiculous I must be to be getting so worked up over so (relatively) little. He argued with me, going into true fix-it mode, but also held me till I felt better. What a good husband.

Monday late night: woke up around 3am, couldn't get back to sleep for an hour or more. Lay there getting more and more wound up.

Tuesday: Woke up tired. Found it hard to motivate myself to do anything. Forced myself to clean the kitchen, mostly to see if I could. I could, but failed to feel my usual sense of accomplishment in completing boring chores. Got a call from Team Leader, around 11am, about day swaps and work Christmas lunch. Sent me into a fury (not with him).  Found it very hard to concentrate on being a good parent, being patient etc. Liam of course responded by acting out, tipping his whole tub of yogurt out.  Eventually we went to bed for our nap and I cried us to sleep.

Tuesday afternoon: feeling wheezy again, but breathing moreorless OK otherwise. Realised that this stress and anger about work has been coming on for a long time.  I have been frustrated by the non-supportive culture in my department ever since I returned part time.  And in truth before that, but then it wasn't so personal, since I wasn't part time.

Maybe I should get out after the next baby.  Assuming there is one.  It's hard to have any perspective at the moment though.

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