Archive for the ‘Working’ Category

Under the Moon

13 June 2019

Everything is feeling ominous to me tonight. The moon is rising among some scattered clouds in an otherwise brilliant blue sky towards the end of a gorgeous day, yet it feels as if the world is ending. Even the catbirds and mourning doves sound odd and alien.

Part of this is from reading the news, which I know I should not do. Part of it is just being really tired (for no good reason). Part of it is being at my particular pre-retirement stage of life, and wanting to be done with everything IT and somehow transition to a simpler existence.

Oh well, watcha gonna do? I’ll keep acting as if everything is okay and see if I can make it through the next 24 hours without losing it.

Retirement

1 September 2011

I want to retire in 6 years, when I’m 62. But my boys will be looking at college in the near future at that point, and it’s a little hard to conceive of retiring then.

Are other people so beaten down and empty-headed that they can’t think of anything they’d rather do with their life than work? Is that why so many people don’t retire until they die, or retire and then go back to work?

Rambling

1 September 2011

It always seems as if I have lots of thoughts running around in my head until I stop to write them down. When I do that, they evaporate.

I buy lottery tickets because I don’t want to work any more. I’ve never been fond of doing what other people want me to do, paid or unpaid. I just want to do what I want to do, no more and no less.

I’m not afraid of physical labor. I enjoy exercise. I like reading. I like gardening.

So I resort to various forms of mental trickery to get trick myself into thinking I like work. It’s a fact that I have to do it, and will have to do it for several more years. It’s also a fact that I don’t want to be miserable. So I resort to trickery, pretending, acting as if.

I wonder if other people do that. I have no real idea. I think it’s likely that some do but most don’t. Most people just accept it and try not to think too much about it. Some people seem to genuinely like their jobs.

But that trickery, that self-deceit, is poisonous. It will first poison your soul, and then it will kill you.

Oh well, this is too depressing and I don’t feel like writing about it any more.

I want to do things I love, things I find joyful. I want to do them every day. I don’t want my days to be filled with unrelenting worry and toil. I want to do things I love. Mostly that means moving my body somehow. I know I have to work, because someone has to earn money to pay for everything the family wants and needs (although that’s another topic — all of us need to want less). But at 56, I’m locked into the job I have, no matter how I feel about it. I have to find my joy elsewhere. That sucks, considering how much of my time and energy I end up putting into work, but that’s the way it is.

And also, I don’t take advantage of aspects of my job I could be taking advantage of. Specifically, the almost total flexibility in my hours. I need to be more ready to change my work hours to accommodate the joyful things I need on a daily basis. I might as well use my vacation for my joy. Also, I don’t need to be that concerned about commuting with C every day — I’m perfectly capable of parking on Arbor Street and walking or jogging to and from Dayton Street. That isn’t that big a deal, and it’s very much fitting with a Paleo lifestyle. I don’t need to be concerned with exercising too much until I’m falling down.

My new standing workstation is very much in accordance with that also. It’s much easier to stay awake and active when standing than it is when sitting. I have to admit that I do get tired of standing all the time, but that’s kind of the point, isn’t it? Gentle energy expenditure is good. Paleolithic man didn’t sit on his butt all day.

Attitude

22 August 2011

What is working for others about if it’s not about maintaining a positive attitude?

“I Relax by Getting Things Done”

19 June 2011

That was something my old boss, Bob Lay, told me once. I thought it was total bs at the time, but now I’m beginning to see the truth of it.