Today is the first day of my new job. I am so excited. I feel like --
somehow -- it's my first real job out of college. You know, that
expression people use: "my first real job out of college."
So what have I been doing for the past twenty-plus years? Good
question. Well, let's see, there were several years of unstructured
adventure, including that handmade jewelry business that involved
street vending and town festivals. And college student unions. And
beloved Jazz Fest in dear, magical New Orleans. Also those years at the
ashram. Somewhere in there was the performance art, which, of course,
didn't make any dime. Then production work in Los Angeles, which
devolved into craft services (running the food table) on C movies.
Still more fun then the office temping, which spanned a couple of
decades, on and off. Product demonstrations in L.A. led to supermarket
food sampling in Madison, Wisc., a part-time profession that has become
increasingly low-status over time. Delivering The Onion and the Add
Sheet was a lot of fun, and helped Don and me get to know Madison very
quickly. Temping led to a full-time job working in the office of the
Wisconsin Association of Life Underwriters, but how long could
something with a name like that possibly last for a person like me? The
work was fun and challenging for a while, but after I reorganized the
place and gave all the printed material a facelift, it got old. Worst,
though, was the micromanaging, fear-driven boss who seemed to be made
nervous by my presence. I was smarter than she was, and she knew it --
but she made triple or more the money I did, and I think she didn't
know what to do with that information. She was the first of the
micromanagers. Next came the string of miraculously wonderful
opportunities at small, growing companies that needed a smart person to
help them out at the ground floor -- Internet service provider,
regional publishing company, massage school. Each devolved into a
nightmare of micromanagement, a disempowering, humiliating agony.
Somehow, none of these places felt like "a real place" in some sense.
Somehow like they were all playing at being a business.
Oh, yeah, and then there is cab driving. And involvement with worker cooperatives. A whole 'nother story.
Somewhere along this line, I picked up computer skills and computer
graphics skills. Using a computer has always been fun for me. Using
imaging programs, like Photoshop, and desktop publishing or layout
programs, like Quark, PageMaker, and InDesign, has always been the most
fun of all. (Although Illustrator and other drawing programs have
always been a deep mystery.)
Apparently I have managed to noodle around with this stuff long enough
and with enough drive to actually get good at at. Good enough to
somehow stumble into a job doing it. At a real place. A printing place
that makes great big pictures, the kind you see hanging from the
ceilings of department stores where people are wearing the fashionable
clothes of the season, or plastered all over the walls of museums, or
transparently on the windows of bookstores, or cutout lifesize in a
movie theater lobby. When the pictures are really big, little details
in the pictures become very important, so having people who care about
details is key. Having people who actually like noodling over those
details is important. And having people who like organizing papers and
computer files and notes about what's been done and what needs to be
done in such a way that whoever comes next in the workflow can figure
out what's going on -- apparently that is also key.
So, although I applied for a weekend job at this place babysitting a
giant printer that prints on paper and other material up to 16 feet
wide (!), rolling up the paper or vinyl or whatever and moving it
around with a forklift, somehow I found myself in the running for a
fulltime job in the digital image prep department. Against people with
degrees in graphic design and stuff like that. Me with my degree in
philosophy and my wacky, chequered work history.
It's like they care more about my aptitudes, attitudes, and abilities than about my formal training and experience.
Is that crazy, or what?
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about us
In alphabetical order, we are:
b. 1963 from New Jersey and Georgia Ulysses Eugene V Kovach b. 2004 from Madison, Wisconsin Vesna Vuynovich Kovach "blogger in chief" b. 1962 from Baltimore Search
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