Archive for the ‘work’ Category

Middleager

by wil — Mar. 11, 2010

So I’m taking a video/film class — Film 130: Video Production I. “Film” just sounds so much better than “video,” doesn’t it? “Video” evokes crappy home movies, crappy public-access cable programs, crappy crap. “Film” evokes auteurs creating art. But I digress. The other day, during a class discussion, three students — all of whom happen to be 26 — said they felt “old.” I’m 38. If 26 is “old,” what does that make me? Ancient? Decrepit?

I’ve been thinking about my age recently, and the possibility of starting a new career (in film). Let’s face facts, shall we? I’m middle-aged (I’m not one of those people that refuses to use the term “middle-aged”, as if that somehow negates the difference between 18 and 38). If I live to 75 (avg. lifespan), I’m almost exactly at the halfway point. Hmm…you might say it’s the perfect time to start something new. You might also say:

  • You tried to reinvent yourself once before, as a writer/novelist, and failed spectacularly
  • You’re a dreamer, who doesn’t always follow up grandiose visions with necessary action
  • The film industry is an insular, LA-based industry, and you don’t live or want to live in Los Angeles
  • Film-making requires massive amounts of time and energy, and you’re not exactly a workaholic

All good points.

Let me respond (to my own inner critic):

  • You tried to reinvent yourself once before, as a writer/novelist, and failed spectacularly
    • True, but that doesn’t mean I should just give up.
  • You’re a dreamer, who doesn’t always follow up grandiose visions with necessary action
    • True, but sometimes I do.
  • The film industry is an insular, LA-based industry, and you don’t live or want to live in Los Angeles
    • LA is not the end-all-be-all of movie-making. Just take a look at MovieMaker’s 2010 “annual ranking of the country’s best cities in which to be an independent moviemaker.” #1 on the list? Albuquerque, NM
  • Film-making requires massive amounts of time and energy, and you’re not exactly a workaholic
    • It’s just possible, having discovered something I’m really excited about, I’ll be having so much fun I just won’t want to stop.

So maybe I’m not “young and hungry,” but I’m not “old and satiated” either. I’m middle-aged and ready for something new. Brace yourself world. I’m coming out swinging.

When I grow up

by wil — Oct. 20, 2009

This is my take on Genie @ … in a Bottle’s 10th Living Out Loud project

I was never one of those people that always knew what they wanted to be when they grew up. I sorta muddled my way through, tried this and that, and, luckily, wound up with a career I currently enjoy.

Jobs I’ve actively pursued and/or seriously thought I might like (in rough chronologic order):

  • aeronautical engineer: I wanted to design and build cool human-powered vehicles like Varna’s Diablo and MIT’s Daedalus, but I discovered very quickly that I was much more interested in (visual/industrial) design than thermodynamics and vector analysis
  • human powered vehicles
  • Army helicopter pilot: I thought semi-seriously about joining the Army to fly Blackhawk and/or Apache helicopters, but the whole dying/killing-for-my-country thing is not really my style
  • bilingual something-or-other: back in the day, I thought maybe I could parlay my Japanese or Spanish into some sort of money-making endeavor…maybe teach English in Japan or something
  • history professor: I graduated with a BA in history, so I thought I might eventually teach the subject, but I wasn’t accepted into the grad school of my choice, so I moved on
  • librarian: data organization/retrieval seems sort of fun to me (I know, I am one wild and crazy guy!) and I enjoy research, so I thought I might like to be a reference/academic/corporate librarian or a private information broker or maybe work in a library-related IT field, but I discovered I enjoyed web design/development more than librarianship
  • web designer/developer: I thought I would enjoy the combination of coding and visual design…and I do! Plus, the web is cool
  • writer: I tried writing a novel and thought about writing for a tech blog, but I write v-e-r-y  s-l-o-w-l-y and dislike the idea of writing under a deadline

Jobs I’ve actually had (in rough chronologic order):

  • data entry clerk: I worked part-time at my Dad’s office entering…*yawn*…data — it was a bit boring, but I liked the office atmosphere
  • rent-house maintenance guy: I worked part-time for my Mom cleaning rent houses, mowing lawns, etc. — eh, not my cup of tea
  • accounting assistant: my wife’s aunt got me a job in the accounting department of a direct-mail company — the owner once made me and another guy mop the warehouse floor…on Saturday!
  • dj (intern): for one semester, I was an early-morning, university-radio dj — cool, but I didn’t like having to get up so early
  • librarian (intern): for one semester, I interned as a librarian in the Texas Comptroller’s Office — the nail in the coffin for librarianship
  • web designer/developer: for two years I worked at a boutique web design firm during the dot-com bubble (woohoo!), then the bubble burst (boohoo) — I’ve been a freelancer ever since

Work

by wil — Sep. 17, 2009

For a long time, I’ve been getting 99.9% of my work from one guy — which works great when he has work to give me, but not so great when he doesn’t have work to give me. I’ve tried to develop additional sources of work, but as there are about 50 bazillion web designers/developers out there, and networking’s really not my strong suit, it can be tough to land freelance gigs. But lo! Monday, I responded to a Craigslist ad, instantly got the job, and have since coded a lovely new corporate blog.* And the client loves it, and may have lots more work to throw my way. So, yay!

* Who knew? All the time I spent fiddling with this WordPress blog this summer, I was actually honing my job skillz. And yes, I realize that “lovely” and “corporate blog” probably do not belong in the same sentence.