We're in love. We're ... lovers. We're lesbian, gay-type lovers.

Willow ,'Potential'


Natter 66: Get Your Kicks.  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, pandas, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Nora Deirdre - Jul 09, 2010 1:42:10 pm PDT #11531 of 30001
I’m responsible for my own happiness? I can’t even be responsible for my own breakfast! (Bojack Horseman)

No, not at all!


§ ita § - Jul 09, 2010 1:42:43 pm PDT #11532 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I got the most advancement in my suckiest job. I can't call it mentoring, because they were primarily trying to use existing resources to accomplish as much as possible. Even though they didn't pay me commensurate, they did let me change my title, and that flowed up with subsequent jobs. And the boss in my second suckiest job tried, he really did, but the glass ceiling was low and I was fscked.

Right now, I don't know if I want to shift titles. I've been senior at random different stuff since I was 23. The stuff I do that I'm not senior in yet, it's because it looks like a headache.

At one of my last jobs, they went out of their way to provide a career track that was technical and non-management and led to just about the same pay points, which was great. But that was before the economy crashed. I doubt I'll work like that again.

My current boss is very encouraging. At the very least I'd be happy to explore the boundaries of pay and responsibility of my current role. Or, you know, get a perm position.


Sophia Brooks - Jul 09, 2010 1:43:10 pm PDT #11533 of 30001
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

You know, this makes me mad all over again about Universal Health Care. I think I would be working freelance in theatre right now if not for the thought of not having insurance, or having to pay my own I might even have stuck with it or gone back to it sooner. But with pre-existing mental health issues, plus being obese (and I was "overweight" classified at a size 6) I am a slae to the man of insurance, unless I find a partner.

I told my boss today (Republican) that the argument for universal healthcare should be that it would get more people starting business and getting growth going, because they would not be stuck in jobs!


Jesse - Jul 09, 2010 1:49:03 pm PDT #11534 of 30001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

In thinking about other fields, I feel extra lucky that that first receptionist job I got was in a tiny nonprofit, which I think made it easier to move over into a non-admin department. But that's just the first example of my job-related luck, which has been very good to me. Not that all of the jobs have been great, and not that I'm not a good employee, but I have been VERY lucky wrt getting jobs over the years.

Anyway, I come with a question for the hivemind: I have GOT to do laundry, forgot I am out of detergent, and can't bear to go to the store. A little google suggests these options that I have on hand: dish soap, shampoo, baking soda. What do you all vote for?


javachik - Jul 09, 2010 1:57:29 pm PDT #11535 of 30001
Our wings are not tired.

Baking soda~!


beth b - Jul 09, 2010 2:01:00 pm PDT #11536 of 30001
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

Shampoo is gentle and good for breaking down any greasy spots


flea - Jul 09, 2010 2:03:05 pm PDT #11537 of 30001
information libertarian

Dish soap.

Sophia, you don't have to have a subject Master's degree to be an academic librarian, though in some cases it helps. I will warn you, though, that it is not a guaranteed job - despite some trend stories, there is actually an overpopulation of librarians right now. Also, you can do decently well (pay- and responsibility-wise) working as a paraprofessional in some libraries (and by decent pay, I mean academic-level decent). I would NOT go into serious debt for a library degree without some pre-existing experience in the field. Contacts get you jobs. Go talk to librarians where you work, and start the networking process there.

I haven't worked in many jobs, because I spent 6 years in grad school, but I have been fantastically lucky in my bosses & work cultures. Never anyone insane or evil, and some serious mentoring and support at my last workplace.


javachik - Jul 09, 2010 2:04:09 pm PDT #11538 of 30001
Our wings are not tired.

Ha! Poor Jesse got three different responses. We wouldn't be Buffistas otherwise.


flea - Jul 09, 2010 2:08:53 pm PDT #11539 of 30001
information libertarian

Heh. Dish soap seems the most like laundry soap, is why I picked it.

Sophia, do you have experience with Blackboard? Could you do the staff job on this page, for example? [link]


Kathy A - Jul 09, 2010 2:09:04 pm PDT #11540 of 30001
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

Is it pretty much necessary to have a masters in a subject area before being hired as a librarian at a college?

ETA: Ignore what I say here--I missed your reference to "a subject area." Sorry!

If you want to be paid anywhere above minimum wage, yes. Back in 1992, I was working full-time at the local (very small) branch library, and I was doing just about everything there short of branch director-level duties, and I was getting minimum wage, which at the time was $6.50/hr, but I did have benefits as well, so that was a big plus. Thank God I was living at Mom's then, because I would not have been able to live off of what I made between that job and my part-time gig at Michael's.

I was talking with one of my classmates in my reference class last night, and she told me that she's making less than $18K/year as a part-timer at one of the smaller libraries at Loyola University here in Chicago. I asked her if they would give her a full-time job that would let her continue to attend classes in her off hours, and she said that full-time gigs were non-existent without the MLS.