Things feel a little better now, but this past week, not so much. For the love of Pete, this economy sucks. I got the news that I would not be getting the job I was half doing and applied for a few weeks ago. It's kinda complicated, as most things are in a bureaucratic setting, so I won't go into the whole scenario. Wouldn't put it past them to hire external over internal, although I don't know details yet. Such a wicked place. Very new experience for me, as where I used to work, I was promoted a bunch and felt rather valued. I've also never been so comfortable and uncomfortable in an interview. The comfortable part was just that I felt reasonably confident, but the uncomfy part -- can you please take the stick attached to the vacuum (with a new soul-suck setting) out of your ass and talk to me like someone you've met before? Could you ask questions directed at me, the human-like creature you work with? Stifling. I've always felt that way about UCLA Extension, but it was even more apparent in the interview process...especially in my corner, where the higher-ups send formal business emails about birthdays. Please do me a favor and un-clench. Please.
The day they broke up with me, I also got stuck in president traffic. Obama was in the busiest area of LA and they closed Wilshire Blvd. I was tooling around Westwood on a bus for 45 minutes, doing a couple y-turns, more than a little disconcerting on a bus in the middle of a neighborhood, before we got on the highway and went somewhere far from where I live. It only took me almost two hours to get home, shoulda taken 40 minutes. Was hungry and more than a little cranky. Then, the next morning, having no real honest desire to go to work, I hopped my bike, because there was a meeting I felt obligated to participate in (for the job I won't be doing anymore, uh-huh). Then, Wilshire was again closed for Obama for some undetermined amount of time. No detour specified, wait down the block until we say. Really? Sign from the verse not to go in that day, so I went along with it. Stayed home and freaked out.
So, other than having my salary cut in half (what's half of not much?), I'm happy not to have to go to the soul-sucking place as much. Where shall I go? What shall I do? I kinda like the adventure of it. Feeling a little bi-polar these days.
You know all those fun like, teenage emotions, like, you think you left behind you? I love it when they pop up again and you have to shove them back because you know better now. When someone breaks up with you, no matter in what context, the same things come up:
1) I hope the person they hire ends up being terrible/difficult and they regret not hiring me. or, I hope the next woman ends up being psycho and puts him through hell.
2) In a very short time, I'd like to get back to them with my mounds of money and fame and tell them I'm so glad they passed me over and they can stick their soul-suck vacuum somewhere else. or, I hope my hot new boyfriend is busy worshipping the ground I walk on when I run into the guy that broke up with me.
3) You can't believe they beat you to the break-up. The rejection is terrible even though you never liked them much and didn't see it going anywhere. YOU'RE breaking up with ME?????
Poppies
I
visted the California Poppie Reserve last weekend, quite a spectacle. For a few weeks each springtime, you see things like this:

Cheese
Although definitely not the type of festival I'm used to in Milwaukee, it was amusing to attend "The Grilled Cheese Festival" in downtown LA this weekend. We ate cheese and various other stuff grilled on various breads, all good. The entertainment included a cheese calling contest, which of course I was fascinated by, never having heard of such a thing in my native land. The nature of the contest varied from lame to surprising. Some people just called cheese like they'd call their dog, "Here gouda gouda gouda, c'mon gouda", the winner dedicated it to her boyfriend Jack and just yelled Jaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaack as long as her breath lasted, along with a few gyrations, and then said at the end "I love you, baby". Good laugh. The slogan for the event was "Bread-Butter-Cheese-Victory!" Great on a t-shirt.
Miss you mom and dad! Was nice to have them close for a couple months out here. Was driving one day after they left thinking "I'll stop over to see them!", and the thought made me happy, but alas, it would have been a long drive......