I've been sick... I actually took a couple days off work last week and anyone who knows me knows that I have to be pretty sick to do that.
I just came back from wrangling my son... I guess he's a little tired but doesn't want to sleep. My wife's taking a nap and keeping him quiet and away from her door is damn near impossible. I tried playing with him on the couch, flinging him up and down, which was making him laugh a little but mostly just pissed hm off. Of course, taking him outside onto the sun porch and holding him and spinning, practically the same motion, made him laugh and giggle and calm right down. Kids are weird. Now he's sitting quietly in his high chair watching TV, hopefully about the nod off for a little while.
Related to my problem with accepting any job given to me at work is my tendency to think up a million projects for myself that would be really cool to do but, taken as a whole list, are so imposing that I end up doing nothing. I am trying to make that change although I now have approximately 9 things to write and "publish" in one way or another so I'll have to sit down and really plan out how I will get them all done. I'd better go and stop procrastinating.
[Oh yeah, and I'm currently listening to Chris Martin's "Vertical Horizon".]
Saturday, 28 October 2006
Sunday, 8 October 2006
My weaknesses...
Finally finished reading "Knife of Dreams"
by Robert Jordan, Book 11 of the Wheel of Time series. Whew. Great series. Now I just have to wait for book 12... (Which is apparently the end. Damn.) I don't know what I'm going to read next. Probably something to review.
Work's been good but busy. I know what my "weakness" is: I have a tendency to accept any job given to me. I can't say no. And not because I'm too polite. Assignments given to me always appear really easy to me so I say "yeah sure, no problem" and inevitably it turns out to be a little more work that I expected. To solve this problem, I'm trying to be able to judge workload more accurately and earlier so that I know when I should "just say no".
Back in my September 27th entry, I mentioned that Quicken was useless. I've gone back to storing, classifying and summarising our spending in Excel. Quicken may be a great tool for some people, but some of the things I need to know about our money, Quicken either does not do, or does it in an overly complicated bizarre way. I'm not an accountant, but I was a math major (for a year and a half *laugh*) and I understand how averaging and adding works *laugh* but sometimes I don't think the makers of Quicken Cash Manager did. So I make do with Excel. Actually I really like Excel. I've probably said that before. I've probably said it several times before... It's a little work any time something substantially changes but it's actually much better for me than STOOPID QUICKEN!
Another thing I tend to repeat is that I am SO a librarian... I like music. I wish I could write music. I bet I could but... anyway, the point is is that I like a variety of music genres (electronica, classic rock, classical, retro 80s, etc.) and so I collect as much of it as possible. I've taken much of my CD collection and ripped it so I can access it from my computer (I hate physical 'things' LOL) but so much of my music files are in an "unsorted" folder because I can't consider it all sorted until I've gone through it all, one-by-one, and made sure it's the right song, that the title/artist/genre fields are all filled in accurately, and the file names are consistent. I do this with everything. I wanted to save some pages from a book of "Outdoor projects" but instead of just photocopying them, I had to scan them, convert them to PDF, and fill in the title/subject/source properties accurately and consistently. Yeah... meta-data rules!
[Currently listening to "Chromakey Dreamcoat" by Boards of Canada. Although from Scotland, not Canada, this song really makes me think of those Film Board of Canada vignettes that used to be on TV.]
Work's been good but busy. I know what my "weakness" is: I have a tendency to accept any job given to me. I can't say no. And not because I'm too polite. Assignments given to me always appear really easy to me so I say "yeah sure, no problem" and inevitably it turns out to be a little more work that I expected. To solve this problem, I'm trying to be able to judge workload more accurately and earlier so that I know when I should "just say no".
Back in my September 27th entry, I mentioned that Quicken was useless. I've gone back to storing, classifying and summarising our spending in Excel. Quicken may be a great tool for some people, but some of the things I need to know about our money, Quicken either does not do, or does it in an overly complicated bizarre way. I'm not an accountant, but I was a math major (for a year and a half *laugh*) and I understand how averaging and adding works *laugh* but sometimes I don't think the makers of Quicken Cash Manager did. So I make do with Excel. Actually I really like Excel. I've probably said that before. I've probably said it several times before... It's a little work any time something substantially changes but it's actually much better for me than STOOPID QUICKEN!
Another thing I tend to repeat is that I am SO a librarian... I like music. I wish I could write music. I bet I could but... anyway, the point is is that I like a variety of music genres (electronica, classic rock, classical, retro 80s, etc.) and so I collect as much of it as possible. I've taken much of my CD collection and ripped it so I can access it from my computer (I hate physical 'things' LOL) but so much of my music files are in an "unsorted" folder because I can't consider it all sorted until I've gone through it all, one-by-one, and made sure it's the right song, that the title/artist/genre fields are all filled in accurately, and the file names are consistent. I do this with everything. I wanted to save some pages from a book of "Outdoor projects" but instead of just photocopying them, I had to scan them, convert them to PDF, and fill in the title/subject/source properties accurately and consistently. Yeah... meta-data rules!
[Currently listening to "Chromakey Dreamcoat" by Boards of Canada. Although from Scotland, not Canada, this song really makes me think of those Film Board of Canada vignettes that used to be on TV.]
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)