Maybe I've always been here.

Early ,'Objects In Space'


Spike's Bitches 25 to Life  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


WindSparrow - Jul 12, 2005 12:39:02 pm PDT #313 of 10001
Love is stronger than death and harder than sorrow. Those who practice it are fierce like the light of stars traveling eons to pierce the night.

sj, I hope you get to feeling better soon. The achy thing sucks.

Yay for Annabelle!

Boo on my boss for telling graphic horror stories during training. Developmentally disabled people are vulnerable to so many terrible things. We all know this. Those of us who work in that field know it better than most. But the details we usually keep in the back of our minds. Bossman brought them all to the front of my mind today. I tried to take a little nap before Dan gets home from work, but every thing bossman said keeps popping into my mind's eye every time I close my eyes.

He'd probably be glad. He told those stories for good reason.

I'm sitting here with a glass of wine. Traditional self-medication.

ETA: P-C, sorry I have no useful insight. I'd be torn between letting it go another week, or emailing back to say "Per your email of June 28, I expected to hear from you by now.... blahblahjobsearchwordsblah." But really, I'd say give it a week then email back to touch bases with her. Job hunting, as a recreational activity, sucks. But you are gonna find the right thing, and be brilliant at it.


Susan W. - Jul 12, 2005 12:53:42 pm PDT #314 of 10001
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

The communication being the one informing me I would hear back in 1-2 weeks. It's been two weeks. Gah.

Annoying as it is, you want to give them a little longer than they say it's going to take--it's one of the parts of the job search where you err on the side of being patient.

It's the same with publishing, FWIW. Someday when you're sending your book proposal to an editor or agent who says they respond to queries in 4-6 weeks, you give them AT LEAST two months before you check on the status of your query. That's just how it's done. You can be a little pushier with a job search, though--give them an extra week rather than an extra month.


Susan W. - Jul 12, 2005 12:54:34 pm PDT #315 of 10001
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

And thanks for the yays for Annabel!


Daisy Jane - Jul 12, 2005 1:01:27 pm PDT #316 of 10001
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

You know, I just remembered. My parents thought I wasn't talking, though I seemed pretty intelligent, and thought they were doing something wrong since I was an only child and wasn't getting any input from anyone but them. Then one day (I can't remember how old- old enough that they thought I should be at least trying to make words), we went to visit some of dad's friends who had just gotten a dog, and clear as day I pointed to it and said "Bubbie!" (which is incidentally what I call Oz when I'm babytalking him. I guess old habits never die.)


Narrator - Jul 12, 2005 1:10:46 pm PDT #317 of 10001
The evil is this way?

Do they sweeten the pot for the players in any other way, do you know?

No. There have been various demands that players be paid a stipend, to give them some "walking around money" since they really can't work a job and go to school and do sports. The NCAA and the schools have always opposed this, I suspect at least in part because paying the students in that fashion cuold result in them being viewed as "employees" -- which would, for example, require the school to pay the student workers compensation benefits if the student is injured playing sports.


Daisy Jane - Jul 12, 2005 1:15:37 pm PDT #318 of 10001
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

It also comes uncomfortably close to being a payoff.


sj - Jul 12, 2005 1:21:09 pm PDT #319 of 10001
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

Make it worth his while. wink, wink, nudge, nudge.

That goes without saying.

The dishwasher is running. The stuff that wouldn't fit is soaking in the sink. Yes, there really was that much stuff in the sink. I think dinner is going to be take out pizza because there is no light in the kitchen at the moment. As soon as the dishwasher is done, I am going to take a long soak in the tub, which should help the pain. BTW, for those who don't hate sweet smelling beauty products, Bath & Body Works' Tutti Dolci honey baths make lots of lovely bubbles and they're on sale now.


§ ita § - Jul 12, 2005 1:23:40 pm PDT #320 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Pageant photo retouching -- this stuff is like crack.

eta: Kid's still scary, though.


Narrator - Jul 12, 2005 1:23:40 pm PDT #321 of 10001
The evil is this way?

It also comes uncomfortably close to being a payoff.

Maybe, but then so is tuition and room and board, which is what a student-athlete gets now. I think I'd rather stop the charade of them getting outside "jobs" from boosters and let them use whatever free time they have actually going to classes and otherwise being college students. I think $50.00-$100.00/month during the sports season is not unreasonable. I mean, without a job or family, some of the athletes now don't have money to go to a movie, chip in to buy a pizza, etc. They "work" long hours for sports for the school. A small stipend seems fair to me.


§ ita § - Jul 12, 2005 1:25:10 pm PDT #322 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

A small stipend seems fair to me.

Absolutely. The colleges are making assloads of money. Set some standard across the board, maybe, to stop the big schools offering fat paychecks, but ... indentured labour is so century before last.