My notion this morning was since I was unproductive yesterday I would just say screw it and take off for west coast FL to see my sister visiting from NY. Of course, now I have had a half dozen customer calls with various issues!
But I am going to leave anyway and let DH deal with it!
Good call, Laura.
I'm having my first cup of coffee since last Saturday. It's decaf, but still, coffee.
And I just noticed that my plug in coffee cup warmer says "Be careful the hot" where you put the cup. I'm finding that charming.
You would think the Director of Information Services would be able to google something like preferred pronouns, wouldn't you?
Shir, I wish I could buy tickets to see that, even if it would probably end in actual physical violence. (Though maybe she'd be better behaved in person.) At any rate, I've now blocked her on Messenger and unfriended on Facebook, so her overlap into my actual life is done.
In happier news, another DUKBoat was sighted by me, AND the local garden shop has pansies out for sale. And the Greenway carousel has taken the winter storage panels down and is open for (kind of cold) business.
You would think the Director of Information Services would be able to google something like preferred pronouns, wouldn't you?
This, yes. Storyrant time.
So you know how I work at the National Library here? And all is pretty sweet other than payment (which is why I'm applying to other jobs now. Payment is ridiculously low, to all of us). I'm surround with mostly smart people with amazing knowledge and skills, but some of them are with attitudes that make me cringe and wonder why they choose this profession.
I have the wonderful opportunity of helping to shape an SFF event in the library, inviting speakers and curating an exhibition from the library's books and archives. It's cool in mind-blowing scales, however I keep seeing two biases during the set up of this event (and in general, day to day work): 1. "I've never heard of X. X probably doesn't exist and there's no need to have a place for it in the library or take seriously the people who are talking/asking about X", and 2. "We already had this item in an exhibition in the past, so we cannot use it again, it will make us look ridiculous" (I started calling this "virginity tests", because it makes as much sense). This makes me so angry.
Colleagues, you have an incredible opportunity to work in a National Library and a duty to make knowledge accessible to others. How dare you betray this opportunity and deny access/knowledge of an item just because another person saw it before in a different context. How dare you think that you know everything there is to know and to assume that you encountered every field of knowledge that is meaningful to other people. How dare you not to use your position, intellect and skills to make information and data better and meaningful and friendly to others. This is not what being a librarian is about.
end of rant
Oof, that does sound ridiculous, Shir. Good luck in your search!
I just finally buckled down to do a task I've been avoiding, and it turns out to be not that big a deal, AND the person who asked for it might not need it anymore! So yay, I guess? (But I could have avoided some anxiety around it by finding all this out two weeks ago.)
I hate when that happens, Jesse!
One of the people I was supposed to be on a call with this afternoon is on vacation, so that's getting pushed out to next week. Ahhhh, so much less pressure.
I mean, it's better than it being a huge ordeal and a problem that I procrastinated!