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  <title>uncertainty</title>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/taxonomy/term/199"/>
  <link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://domesticat.net/taxonomy/term/199/atom/feed"/>
  <id>http://domesticat.net/taxonomy/term/199/atom/feed</id>
  <updated>2008-01-11T21:51:56+00:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>blue-haired heart</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2007/08/blue-haired-heart" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2007/08/blue-haired-heart</id>
    <published>2007-08-09T04:06:50+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-08-09T04:11:53+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="dragon*con" />
    <category term="techops" />
    <category term="uncertainty" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Hard to believe it's that time of year already.  I've had my head in other things for almost a year now, and it shows.  From reading the boards, I'm one of the last people to get into "con mode."  Everyone else on tech seems to be frothing at the bit to get back to work, and me, I'm a bit hesitant.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Hard to believe it's that time of year already.  I've had my head in other things for almost a year now, and it shows.  From reading the boards, I'm one of the last people to get into "con mode."  Everyone else on tech seems to be frothing at the bit to get back to work, and me, I'm a bit hesitant.</p>
<p>Last year's work paid off.  We documented a lot of our processes last year, and it's making things easier.  The personnel check-in system will run, for the most part, identically to what we used last year.  I'm working on completing my promised rewrite of the radio check-in program.  I made major breakthroughs tonight that make me feel much, much more confident about completing the code on-time.  I want this section done early, so I can work on tidying up a few loose ends.  There are a few external changes that need making to last year's code.  There are more internally, but only a few of us can see those.  Thankfully.  I have a reputation to uphold!</p>
<p>This year's dragon*con is going to be a major change for me.  I attended in 2006 knowing that my life would be very different in 2007, though I knew I'd have no way of predicting the changed.  A year later, here I am, tired, preoccupied, ready.</p>
<p>I love where I work.  I love what we do, and what it stands for.  But at the same time, I'm still not entirely them.  My heart has just as much in common with the blue-haired freaks.  I fight with them, drink with them, work harder with them than just about anyone I've ever known in my life, and I miss them intensely when they're gone.</p>
<p>Lately, the phone calls have started ratcheting up.  There are plans to make and work to do.  The voices on the phone make me miss them, make me mentally fast-forward to that first, magic moment at Brian and Suzan's when I'll look around the living room and see them all there -- my chicks, home to roost.</p>
<p>I miss my radio, and I miss my Ops chair.  I'm ready to plop down, headphone up, look over at Patrick and nod readiness.  At that moment, the doubts fall away.  I know this job, I know these needs; I know the rhythm of ballroom changes and last-minute reschedulings.</p>
<p>I belong there.  My hair may not be blue, but my heart is.  All I have to do is show up, strap on the radio, and I'll remember.</p>
<p>Load-in begins in twenty-one days.</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Job-related hiatus</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2006/09/job-related-hiatus" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2006/09/job-related-hiatus</id>
    <published>2006-09-28T11:31:18+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-07-15T16:01:44+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="librarians" />
    <category term="stress" />
    <category term="uncertainty" />
    <category term="work" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Can I write here about what I see at work?</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Can I write here about what I see at work?  I don't know, and the answers I've gotten are conflicting.  I <em>like</em> this job, and would like for it to stick around, so it's taking priority over personal websites and things like that.Heck, it's taking priority over virtually everything else in my life, too.  I'm trying to get settled, and buy myself some time&mdash;they have more needs than a single person can fulfill right now.  What I'm having to do right now is prioritize more harshly than I've had to in a long time, code fast, code <em>smart</em>, and count on the fact that if I keep my priorities straight, this gets easier.  Eventually.</p>
<p>The truth?  At least for the time being, this job I wasn't looking for WAS what I was looking for.</p>
<p>As soon as I know what I can say, and as soon as I'm no longer regularly pulling 9-hour days every day plus coming in on weekends, chances are  good I'll start speaking up again.  I'll say this, though:</p>
<p>Goodness, librarians are outspoken.</p>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>the lipstick librarian</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2006/08/lipstick-librarian" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2006/08/lipstick-librarian</id>
    <published>2006-08-30T04:15:42+00:00</published>
    <updated>2007-07-15T16:02:31+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="change" />
    <category term="job" />
    <category term="librarians" />
    <category term="library" />
    <category term="life" />
    <category term="quotations" />
    <category term="uncertainty" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<blockquote><p>"If there's ever been a good time for this, it's now&hellip;"</p>
</blockquote>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<blockquote><p>"If there's ever been a good time for this, it's now&hellip;"<br />&mdash;me, to Jody, 7 July 2006</p></blockquote>
<p>So here's the story that's been on the back burner for a month now.</p>
<p>When I prepared to fly to Florida, part of the packing preparations meant securing on-plane reading material.  I'd been breezing my way through Jacqueline Carey's 'Kushiel' series, only to stop dead at the beginning of the fourth book because it had just come out in hardback.  I read fast, and I didn't want to buy it in hardback.</p>
<p>So, knowing that the book had just been released, I decided to check my library's website to see if I could put a hold on the book, so that I could check it out and take it with me.  </p>
<p>It was one-thirty-two in the morning.</p>
<blockquote><p>Me:  "Hey.  May I borrow you for a moment?"<br />Jody:  "Sure.  Especially if it is for nefarious means."<br />Me:  "I have something I want to run past you, and please, please promise me you won't laugh."<br />Jody:  "I won't laugh under any circumstances."</p></blockquote>
<p>I showed him the link.  His response was simple:  "That is right up your alley."</p>
<p>I spent the next morning making phone calls and tracking down information I hadn't needed in a long time, and the end result was me throwing on the black dress and the lucky red shoes and wandering down to the library and tossing off a couple of sheets of paper that landed much more easily than they were created.</p>
<p>I said goodbye to you all knowing that I had an interview scheduled for when I came back.  I told very few people because I didn't want to get your hopes up.  When the interview rolled around and it, too, went extremely well, it became even harder to keep my mouth shut.</p>
<p>I sat, I waited, and the days sludged from one to another in silence.  They called my references, with each call getting longer and longer.  I wondered if I'd be able to hold out, to say nothing until I knew the results of my actions.</p>
<p>I rarely speak of the dichotomy in my background; the confusion inherent in being a literary geek.  I'm just geeky enough to help the literary folk out, and I'm just literary enough to help the geeks talk to the artsy folk.  I've never been completely at home in either place.  I know of people who changed majors in college at the drop of a hat, but for me, my switch from English lit to information systems was a sea change born of immense frustration.  I'd begun to realize that I'd never be wholly at home in a literature department, and I hoped that the change would give me a 'home.'</p>
<p>It wasn't the case, but it ended up being a slightly more marketable degree.</p>
<p>It never even occurred to me to ask if there were other people like me.  Silly me.  I should've asked my friends, because the reaction to my telling them that I am the new webmaster for my county's library system has been unequivocal:  "Oh my goodness!  That's perfect!  Why didn't we think of that before?"</p>
<p>So, yes.  That's me, and that's my news.</p>
<p>In return, I sent Jody a present that had meaning for us&mdash;a set of jade chopsticks.  With it, I sent a note:  "Others believed, but you were first."</p>
<p>If this new chapter has a name, it's "the lipstick librarian."</p>
<blockquote><p>"When I come to terms &hellip; to terms with this<br />My world will change for me"<br />&mdash;Tori Amos, "The Beekeeper"</p></blockquote>
    ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Dividing by zero</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://domesticat.net/2001/05/dividing-zero" />
    <id>http://domesticat.net/2001/05/dividing-zero</id>
    <published>2001-05-11T17:44:49+00:00</published>
    <updated>2008-01-11T21:51:56+00:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>domesticat</name>
    </author>
    <category term="best" />
    <category term="extemporaneous" />
    <category term="friends" />
    <category term="religion" />
    <category term="uncertainty" />
    <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>More often than not, inferences about my life can be drawn from what I do <em>not</em> write about here on domesticat as well as what I <em>do</em> write about.  Since beginning this weblog-turned-journal-turned-something-else-entirely a while back, there have been events in my life that I have not written about here.</p>
<p>Each time, the choice to withhold has been a deliberate one, made after much thought.  I've come to grips with the fact that my life is, to some small degree, on display here&mdash;but that's for another story, another night.  Tonight I'm tipping into the wider half of a bottle of Chardonnay, left unfinished from a night that we had friends over, and trying to dredge up a bit of bravery.</p>
    ]]></summary>
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>More often than not, inferences about my life can be drawn from what I do <em>not</em> write about here on domesticat as well as what I <em>do</em> write about.  Since beginning this weblog-turned-journal-turned-something-else-entirely a while back, there have been events in my life that I have not written about here.</p>
<p>Each time, the choice to withhold has been a deliberate one, made after much thought.  I've come to grips with the fact that my life is, to some small degree, on display here&mdash;but that's for another story, another night.  Tonight I'm tipping into the wider half of a bottle of Chardonnay, left unfinished from a night that we had friends over, and trying to dredge up a bit of bravery.</p>
<p>Tonight I can make one of two choices, and what you don't see is the length of time between each sentence, each paragraph, each line of thought.  I can do one of two things&mdash;tell you about what is really going on in my life, be honest, be a bit self-critical.  Or I can shut it all off and throw another five-minute here-are-the-updates post, sign off for the night, and go curl up on the guest bed with the cats and write for a couple of hours.</p>
<p>The fact that you've read this far tells you what my decision was.</p>
<p>I think the word "fight" is the right one here.  I am fighting with a friend&mdash;a friend whom I know <em>was</em> a regular reader this site, but I do not know if he is one now.  A quick dip into my server logs would tell me the answer, but I would rather not know.</p>
<p>We are fighting about religions, his and mine, and currently I am at a loss as to how we can find a way to continue our friendship as it stands&hellip;<em>stood</em>&hellip;stands.  I do not know which is the correct word choice.</p>
<p>We stand probably as far apart on religious ground as is humanly possible.  He is a staunch Christian, firm in his faith&mdash;in fact, he plans to enter the ministry and make that his life's work.</p>
<p>Words, since I was a child, have been my talisman, my power, my defense, my love&mdash;but until I was twenty-one, not once did I have the courage to put these words together in a sentence:  "I am not Christian."  </p>
<p>Despite protestations to the contrary that there is religious tolerance in the American South, I can tell you firsthand of the subtle ostracism that comes from being on the outside of the One Accepted Religion in the Bible Belt.</p>
<p>While I was growing up, the question "What's your religion?" didn't inspire answers like Buddhist, Muslim, agnostic, or atheist.  The 'correct' answers were Baptist, Southern Baptist, Methodist, or sometimes Presbyterian.  To be a non-Christian was to be something of a non-entity <em>(after all, what did 'they' do on Sundays when everyone else was in church being good?  did they go sacrifice cats to the heathen gods or something?).</em></p>
<p>My formative years had a recurring, secretive theme that I revealed to no one:  <em>"Why do I not believe what everyone around me believes?  Why am I different?"</em>  I grew touchy about it.  I grew very skilled at dodging questions:  being asked "What church do you attend?" always received the answer, "I grew up going to a Methodist church."  Very few people catch that my answer is a non-answer, and go away assuming that I am a member of churchgoing society and, thus, leave me alone, in peace.</p>
<p>Many years ago I made a decision to be quiet about what I believed.  Partly out of spite:  <em>Fine, let them judge me by my actions, and they'll think me to be a fine-upstanding-Christian because I do the good things they're expected to do and believe that (only?) good Christians do.</em>  Partly out of desire to be left alone:  <em>If they don't know, they'll stop this endless evangelization-to-the-unsaved&hellip;do they ALL think this is the first time I've heard any of this?</em>  Partly out of desire to not ruffle matters with Jeff's family, whom I care deeply about.</p>
<p>Being a minority of one on the issue of religion in the American South often leads to two things.  First:  tolerance of all religious beliefs in the hope that someday your own would be not just tolerated with rolled eyes, but actually accepted.  Second:  oversensitivity to Christian dogma toward unbelievers.</p>
<p>So when this friend told me that he felt that he might have to extricate himself from my group of friends (who are a mixture of Christian, pagan, undecided, and atheist) because they were not Christian (and thus not conducive to his spiritual growth), I got mad.  I cannot think of a time in recent memory that I have been angrier&mdash;and angry is not a word I use to describe myself with very often.</p>
<p>Somewhere close to a quarter-century of being sick of having to hide what I truly am came out.  My choice of wording was as bad as his:  I told him, essentially, that if he looked at the non-Christians in our group of friends as second-class citizens, and that if we weren't good enough to spend his precious time with, that he could feel free to let the door smack him on the ass on the way out.</p>
<p>Sigh.  </p>
<p>Our beliefs seem to have no middle ground.  His beliefs tell him that anyone who does not believe what he believes is wrong; <em>ergo sum</em>, I am wrong.  My beliefs tell me that the path to wisdom and inner peace is different for each person, and that each path is a valid one; <em>ergo sum</em>, his belief that his path is the only correct one is wrong.</p>
<p>Stalemate.</p>
<p>Reasoning seems to be futile.  He said to me yesterday:  <em>"But Christ also, after He got to know someone, either demanded that you were for Him or against Him."</em></p>
<p>How does a non-Christian respond to this?  It is analogous to asking me the question, "What is three plus four&mdash;and please answer with only a yes or a no."  My heart and mind tell me the answer is neither yes nor no, but "seven," but that to him, my answer is as illegal and logically unacceptable as dividing by zero.  So we stand at stalemate, each avoiding the other and, probably, gathering our thoughts for the next round.  He still thinks I'm wrong, and I'm still stuck with two contradictory beliefs.  </p>
<p>Belief number one:  that I should support my friends in whatever faith or belief system brings them wisdom, peace, and fulfillment.</p>
<p>Belief number two:  I should be allowed to do the same.  The problem is that his beliefs say that mine are wrong, and imply that I am less of a person because of holding them.  </p>
<p>I cannot accept that, and I do not want to lose his friendship, but I am at a complete and utter loss to find a way to make this work.  In the meantime, my multi-year spiritual crisis continues.  While taking out the trash this morning I muttered to myself, "I know where I <em>don't</em> stand, but that seems to be about all."  An odd Buddhist-influenced <a href="http://www.secularhumanism.org/intro/what.html">secular humanism</a> is as close as I've ever come.</p>
<p>For the first time in my life, I think I'm going to lose a friend over what I believe, and that grieves me deeply.  But maybe it's for the best.  Maybe this is what it takes for me to learn to stand up for what I do&mdash;and don't&mdash;believe.  Maybe it's time to take my near-legendary stubbornness and apply it to this case.</p>
<p>A common theme in my life:  I don't know.  I just don't know.</p>
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