Yup, I'll get started now - better late than never.
A reminder for myself and my sons that you cannot - MUST not - stand in one spot too long. Do not become complacent with adequacy, nor be satisfied with just getting by when you have more to achieve and SO much more to offer. Do not fear... you must begin.
10.03.2020
9.28.2020
Sadness
I don't go looking for it; it just shows up. The day can be as positive as ever, but the hours come to an end and there it is.
Is it the lonesomeness or the loneliness? One of these feels like being endlessly homesick while the other feels like exile.
Both are hideous (and possibly avoidable), but one is definitely given to you and the other is sought out. Either way, with either outcome, the sadness materializes and brings you to a low you didn't see coming. Couldn't see coming.
I should say "I" since I am speaking of my own experiences, but the little bit of distance this difference in verbiage affords me makes it seem just that much less painful.
Wow, that is a complete cop-out on my part, and I know I'm trying to fool myself. Sad is sad, and sadness is real. My sadness may subside over time, but how do I make it leave me alone until I am stronger?
I don't know this for certain, but I am of the frame of mind that a pill shouldn't be the way I handle it.
Is it the lonesomeness or the loneliness?
When I reached out to a years-long friend to get together recently, and was put off several times, I wanted to believe the first one or two rejections were legitimate reasons, but the last two attempts? Well, let me just say I now know were met with less than genuine responses; but because I wanted to believe the reasons (because the alternate thought I was entertaining was not ideal for fighting the sadness). I hung up the phone thinking, 'some other time.'
I bought being gently rebuffed, until I found that this person ended up getting together with other people instead, and I then I fell apart inside. Tried not to take it personally, but that is easier said than done. This was a friend.
It's heartbreaking.
It's an eye-opener.
It's demoralizing.
It's trust-breaking.
It's a horrible way to reinforce learned behaviors - learned over a lifetime of a poor self worth. Does anyone have any extra self-worth I can borrow, or have, or pay you for?
This all makes me feel like walking off into the distance; like disappearing and finding a new place to blend into the woodwork. At least if I make the effort to never be seen right from the start, the lack of interaction won't hurt, as much - right?
No boo-hooing here, just stating what I feel is the a better way to exist.
9.26.2020
What a fool I've been (?)
6.13.2020
Responsible versus responsibility
Timeline is this:
I was hired in January 2018 -
worked under the Quality Manager (trained by and directed to perform basic menial tasks...he wanted an admin, basically). He was pleasantly surprised that I trained easily and accomplished tasks quickly, correctly, and efficiently. Our WH Director assigned other duties and short-range tasks to keep me busy, and because I was more than capable (she knew I would do the work and keep it to myself).
He (QM) was wooed to another facility in June 2018 -
He attempted to take over the impossible task of managing a systemic collapse at his 'new' facility assignment, while also pseudo-watching the goings on and questions that arose at our location.
By July -
we were basically on our own, borrowing moments of his time and attention that his new bosses begrudgingly spared. I was not prepared for the everyday issues that popped up (beyond my scope) because he refused to share information or impart training that could have helped mitigate problems at a low level. However, I managed to chronicle and respond to Sales, CSRs, management and our suppliers, to keep communication moving and prevent material returns from building up and containment issues from becoming stagnant. Again, this was all while trying to work against the wall of opposition from the WH Lead.
August arrived -
and I was tackling problems that were, at first, understandable and easy to keep track of. Unless a PPAP or Material Cert request popped up, or some absolutely technical debacle cropped up (which I would steer towards our Engineering staff and former Quality Mgr), I was doing well - given the circumstances. Our WH Director was supportive and proactive, and she sought to understand my role and functions (as she met with the Quality Manager and myself to better define my tasks and abilities in his absence). She wanted to delegate more responsibility my way, which was fine. All of that would require some training and direction (again, which I was ok with), but the training and hand-off of responsibility would never come.
September thru December -
came and went; no movement was made in finding a replacement for the QM role (mostly because he didn't want to replace himself). We had our year-end inventory, which I was not included in, and then enjoyed a pleasant holiday break.
Also somehow, through this same time period, the WH Lead was allowing an alarming number of mis-pulled and mislabeled materials to leave the facility. These growing issues greatly annoyed our customers and resulted in a lot of fees, returns, and 8D situations. He was told to watch the one very responsible party in his shipping crew creating the bulk of trouble, but never did. This would become a very unmanageable situation for him because he refused to take responsibility. His 'fix' would become my new task - 95% of my new workload for the coming year.
January 2019 -
Upon the return to activities in the new year, our DC Director made the announcement she would be retiring - which, I guess, she did every year. No one held their breath, but her attitude did seem lighter in some respects and more fretful in others. Her most immediate goal was to work with our former QM (my now non-boss) to find his replacement at the DC.
Sometime late in January A-dude joined the team as a year-long temp Quality Manager. If he proved himself, he would be hired the following year. If not, well...
Things went from worse-than-bad to WTH?! at breakneck speed. By the time A-dude showed up, I had already been 100% inspecting every effing labeling job leaving the WH. Every label on EVERY package. Add that monumental chore to the other tasks of my own that I could now not even get to, and you have a big problem growing. Then there was the added strife of training A-dude (trying to train, that is).
He was a man dressed in Teflon and stale-smelling clothing, doused in too much old cologne. Not only did he smell (literally), he stank at his job, too. He wouldn't learn because his MO was to find others to do his work for him. I figured it out early, and after a lot of wasted time trying to repeatedly show him how to use our AX system, I opted to remove myself from his workforce and use the 100% verifications as my salvation. Besides that, he was not my responsibility. He could learn to sink or swim another way.
Over time, he and the WH Lead tried to join forces in an effort to remove me from my position. I had the support of those who knew my work and my capabilities, and would not let them park 'the bus' they were driving on me, but that didn't prevent the work situation from becoming a cluster "f."
December -
A-dude was a waste of money and time, and it only took the company ten months to figure that out. In between, our lovely Director did retire (mid-year) and was replaced by another female figurehead. My new Quality boss began shadowing - and cleverly questioning - A-dude to learn the scope (and status) of all the customer issues, and let me know I was not alone. By...
January thru June 2020 -
I was once again working with, and I still am, our new Quality Manager - and what a difference. [happy sigh]
Now we're doing it during the Covid era, but we are working as a team, and it's been better.
Of course we have a long way to go but at least we are getting there together. We have tackled a big learning curve and become a good team. She has given me knowledge and responsibility, and I try to back her up where I can. She knows she can count on me, and routinely throws things my way - and this has proven her trust in my ability, which I am grateful for.
There's still a lot to do, but it doesn't feel insurmountable any longer.
6.11.2020
I am feeling fairly low right now
Do you know how hard it is on a person to do nothing?
5.26.2020
How could they forget?
I'm thinking midday nap.
5.25.2020
And on it goes
Yes, that's right. I said it. Summer is my least favorite time of year - I do not enjoy hot temps. Any time the mercury rises over 70...that's it, I'm out. Dry heat, muggy heat, it doesn't matter. Heat is meant to cook food, not people.
Yesterday was quite enough, and today is going to push me over the red line. Right over the edge. Past my limit. Oh my, and there are three solid months ahead now of 'summer' heat to come.
I'm melting...melting.
Send bags of ice, please.
5.24.2020
What a funny week
The first day of my self-inflicted furlough boasted a scheduled doctor visit (which was harder than hen's teeth to get). I found one of my freckles had gone rogue around two - maybe three - months ago, becoming red and itchy, tender and flaking. But what really concerned me was the way it mounded where it used to be flat. It took a failed attempt at a virtual call with a doctor, and for her to realize I was saying I have a reason to be seen and not just virtually heard, that culminated in an actual face-to-face meeting...thankfully.
I worked Monday through Thursday afternoon, then gleefully ran out the building for a long, five-day weekend. Yes, that's right. I had scheduled the equivalent to a work week of days off, and whether I lazed them away, or crammed every nook and cranny full of needful activities had yet to be seen.
Here we are now exactly halfway through my break, and I can honestly say it's looking like a solid mix of good intentions has become 70% 'laze' and 30% 'gave it a good shot at accomplishment.' [insert laughter here] Do I have high hopes of bettering the outcome on the 'getting-something-done' side? Mmmmm...I dunno.
Anyhow, back to the doctor visit.
After looking at the bugger on my forearm, the doctor shared my concern and decided it was best not to leave it in place. He quickly set up to perform a "punch biopsy," and we got down to business. The photo shows one day after the event. I was told to change the bandage, perhaps clean it up a bit; no scrubbing, but a sudsy rinse, air dry and application of antibiotic ointment before covering again.
Mission accomplished.
In between the biopsy and this morning I bought a new riding lawnmower and cut 5/6ths of the front jungle, washed one load of laundry, cleaned a small section of the garage, searched the internet for stuff, paid bills, chatted with both of my sons (and my mom), and baked a bit. I still need to get to the grocery store for cat food, milk, more flour, fruit and salad items, orange juice, and one or two other items. Let's see how well I do today.
The end of this coming week will find me at the doc's office to have the sutures removed and (hopefully) learn the down-low on the creature he carved out of my arm. This particular morning began dark and wet, but the sun is currently shining and I see no reason not to try and free up more space on the garage floor - do you? But first I believe I will look at the weather forecast to see if it's changed for the better or stayed the same.
What are you up to today?
5.16.2020
Life goes on
The kid has been holed up with his father for two months. At the time, he was not happy in the least, and refused to pack more than two of anything (underwear, t-shirts, night clothes, etc.), thinking there would be a quick determination that everything would be a fast whirlwind of activity and panic, then all would return to a scary sort of normal. Well, we all know how this has gone, don't we.
After all of these weeks, he's still not happy, but he's not as sour over it any longer, either. Every so often I will make the drive to visit and drop off banana bread or dinner dishes (because there isn't a whole lot of home cooking going on there), spare clothes (which he turned out to be truly grateful for), his desk chair, an Easter basket, books, his favorite tea; you know, basic POW packages but with an additional pay-off.
I miss him. So when I take him something, I cash get to in, too. Just seeing him replenishes my lonely heart. On my last trek I took banana bread (two loaves they could share), tea, fig newtons and a hug! Yup, we did - and he initiated it! And what's more amazing, he has lost some weight - quite a bit from the way his pants were cinched and pleated. He doesn't think so, and somehow he's not feeling it...but he looks so good. This has been a Covid blessing, and I couldn't be happier.
Of course, it will be wonderful to have him back home - when it's safe - but for now it's pretty good. Life goes on and we will be back to all things normal eventually.
4.30.2020
Another year around the sun completed
Heartache and grief didn't kill me.
This Covid19 thingy is out there, so time will tell; 'til then, still ticking.
Elusive employers & a lack of interviews hasn't kept me from breathing.
Driving alongside absolute idiots in cars on I-75 daily - still here.
Last May's heart episode - and subsequent double concussion - HA!
Shed pounds; found more; lost others; holding my own.
Survived the horror of a would-be Quality Engineer. Buh-bye.
The morning is evaporating quickly, so I must get up and move on with this day. Even though I will still be here when it is finished, the time will be lost.
4.25.2020
Moving on - sort of
It's a bright, beautiful Saturday afternoon. The boys are cuddled up and napping, and since Odin currently is hunkered in 'the tent', I feel obliged to remain in bed, too. Yes! It's after 7:45AM and I am still in bed, so calm your jets. Do I have a lot of things to get to...things I should already have accomplished after all of these weeks of flying solo? That would be an emphatic "YES" (- doesn't everyone?), but I seem to have skillfully managed to fritter away so many weekends finishing very little after starting so much. [grimacing]
Let's blame it on:
- the doldrums, or
- the blues, or
- rewarding myself with weekend laziness for having made it through another week, or
- Covid19. Goodness knows this pandemic is the root of all unhappiness at present.
Oh, and in case you've lost track, my lovely girls are all gone now. Old age and health issues have taken sweet, outgoing, robust Cleo, her glorious-but-skittish litter sister (and Blue Cream Maine Coon) Flop, and lastly our mouthy mama bean Hobbes.
After Clee and Flop departed we found Hobbes was depressed and lonely in the kitty partner category, so we adopted/rescued an older sweet street waif - a gentleman through and through - we named "Jake." He was in worse than rough condition, and diagnosed with extremely advanced FIV (feline AIDS), but none of that could tarnish the desire to add him to our brood. Jake was priceless and one of a kind, but besides all of that, he deserved a home and an easier future (for whatever remained of it) - even though it only ended up lasting 5.5 months.
November found us looking for another companion for 'Beana', and she was quickly joined by a totally different sort of brute in the form of an immense Red Maine Coon we dubbed "Booker." Book was a thin-ish juvenile (judged to be around three years of age by the rescue vet), rambunctious and rag-tag in his furriness. He needed some love and care, and a place where he could learn to feel safe once again. He hated my crying over Jake from time to time, and had no issue hissing at me to express his dissatisfaction. I have to admit to being somewhat terrified at his full-faced hisses, and lack of desire to be held, so it's little wonder there was good cause for confusion and trepidation about this new addition.
While he and Beana were excellent company from the start, we humans were held at bay in the get-to-know-you arena. I should say that was true more for me than Karl. Book took to Karl at the beginning more than to myself, and I had a hard time adjusting to the whole thing in general. Don't get me wrong, I loved Booker - I wanted to show him this - but we did not hit it off at the first, and I am not an inwardly patient person. Outwardly, people see me very differently...but this is of little consequence to the story at hand.
A few months later we came to the end of Hobbes' earthly reign, and it was time to search for a companion for Booker. This was not going to be easy or straight forward...and perhaps Book would have been alright as a solo house cat but, truth-be-told, I needed to have another kitty. After all, this had been a three kitty household (and family) for the better part of twenty years!
Once again our purveyor of rescue cats, Dottie (the bringer of Booker and Jake), stepped up to ferry a new rescue into our lives in the form of Odin (formerly dubbed "Possum"). His hard luck story has been told here before, so I won't bore you with it again. If you need to review, you can find it by clicking the label "Odin," and all entries pertaining to our little rapscallion will be at your beck and call.
It took very little time to get the boys integrated - granted, it took more time than other introductions had in our shifting feline dynamics - but less than it could have with these two strong male personalities. Before long, they were comfortable and silly with one another, and we had a working, co-habitating family once more. If you haven't seen it, I put together a very short photo display of the two boys ("the Twins" as we called them), and I will try to locate it and include it in the blog. It shows Booker and Odin, in napping form - and always, ALWAYS with Odin inching closer to Book, until one day...boo yaka shah! [thanks for that, Faraaz]
After less than three years in our arms and beds, and everywhere in between, Booker's time on earth came to an abrupt end. It took the rest of August and all of September for Karl to allow even the possibility of finding a new addition to our family. Odin was in tremendous need, and I was, too, but Karl was torn apart and unable to permit himself the thought of another addition. So, one day while he was out and I ran errands, I came across a roadside rescue event...and the rest is history.
Moving on is not always easy, but it isn't always difficult either, it's just a process. Sometimes the process is messy or protracted. Sometimes the process requires additional steps to be added to the flow chart. Sometimes you don't have anything more to the process other than simply getting up each and every day and surviving until the sun sets and you crawl back into bed. This is where I have been lately, stuck in the get-up-go-do-make-it-through-and-get-back-to-safety routine. I am trying to put distance between myself and my miserable recent past. Depression, the doctor said, and here's a pill for it.
Well, I said "no thanks" - maybe it was a wrong decision, I know it cheesed off one friend - and I am still finding my way around the fuzzy corners and through dark mental hallways. It looks (in my emotional-mentals) like a long dark space (not unlike a wide corridor), and every so often I come upon what I swear would be a doorway. There's a narrow beam of light piercing the gloom, as if from under a closed door, but when I get to the wall where the 'door' should be to feel for a doorknob or handle, there's nothing. I get down on my belly to look under the door, but have the distinct feeling of fear that I am far too close to the edge of being on that floor and falling over instead of seeing something tangible in the space where the light is existing.
Sorry, that's the best way of describing how it feels. It makes taking chances seem futile and overwhelmingly frightening, and so it is safer to keep to myself. Don't reach out; leave your hands at your sides and be careful. See, it feels if I reach out - instead of receiving help - I might actually accidentally push people (family, friends) away...over the edge and out of my life. If I do nothing, if I keep my hands to myself, I won't be doing any unintended harm. Does that makes sense? Don't pull people down and don't push them.
Maybe I am doing it all wrong, but I am also not moving forward (good) or backward (not so good). However, I'm also not moving on.
[sigh]
3.21.2020
Impostors
However, I may have written it in a random way, and for that I apologize.
People at work who are "team leads" or "managers", but who do not know how to lead or create team mentality, and who only manage to create chaos, create backlash from their favoritism practices, and put discourse in place from their own backstabbing and setting people one against the other...those are the impostors.
Impostors practice incessant lying and covering up of things gone wrong, making masses of issues and stacks of boxes, and tempers flare. There is one expert impostor in the White House (and he's put many more like himself - they're called 'yes men' - in places of power) slinging his malicious brand of subterfuge and ignorance. We are all suffering because of this buffoon impostor.
Even our new HR rep accused me of 'trying to pull one over on the new guy' when I brought to his attention a pervasive problem regarding my vacation time. I thought I'd found a fresh set of ears to listen and help me figure it out and fix the oversight. Fortunately, he finally ended up looking further than his ego (and initial perception of my request), and righted the wrong. I just couldn't believe his initial response was to whitewash it by accusing me of trying to cheat the company out of something I had earned and was entitled to, rather than to listen with an open mind.
Our specific building is chockablock full of impostors in positions of leadership, and they have no idea of what they are doing - except when they practice their crap skills, totally intending to create chaos in other directions to keep the eyes of scrutiny engaged in looking in the wrong place, and not focused on problems caused by the impostor's own inadequacies.
Impostors light a fuse then stand back and watch with glee.
Atomic boom.