Friday, September 19, 2003

Mornin'. I just finished watching a friend's presentation on the Posterior Pituitary - done for one of his veterinary classes. I haven't laughed so hard in weeks. *starts snickering just thinking about it* So far, good day. I'm off to work now, but by the by, I've two new fantasy poems up on my Elfwood site that I've not yet posted to my personal one. No Tears and New Eyes Still fiddling with them, so comments are, as always, welcome.

Thursday, September 18, 2003

Bloody hell. If I get one more ninety pound dog that doesn't want to even stand to be lifted into the tub, much less use the stairs, I think I'm going to break my back. Even dogs that should be easy lately have been a bitch to do. And I mean that universally, not just against the actual bitches. *rubs eyes* Add to the fact that work has been pretty busy lately, along with trouble sleeping, and you have one really tired minotaur slogging along.
In depressing news, I finally got a call from the place I interviewed. Took 'em four days longer than they said it would be to call, but I'll give them this, they -did- call. One of the only places I've applied that ever did what they said they would. They called to let me know I didn't get the position. Told you I blew the interview. *snorts* So. Stuck where I am. Coming up on six months I've been working there, and I'm still flat broke, and the place I've been holding my breath for opening has been delayed in construction even longer. How long? Not announced yet. Guess I can exhale, now.
*sighs* I'm so tired. Going to try and sleep some.

Friday, September 12, 2003

I’ve been thinking today, off and on while washing dogs, and driving, and other moments. And though I didn’t get to post on the day of, due to another very loooong day at work, and a yet-again fritzing computer, well… no one will hold it against me, I trust.
September 11, 2001. Second year since that day, and while I did not watch any of the memorials, did not listen to any of the radio shows, and did not read any of the articles, it was in my thoughts all day. I found myself looking out for cops and firefighters and passing idle ambulances – not to avoid them or a ticket, but so I could smile, wave. I thought about buying donuts and bagels and taking them to the nearest police station. If I’d had the money, I probably would have, but the fact remains that I’m broker than most vinyl records. I settled for having lunch with a friend, and tying new red, white, and blue ribbons on my car antenna, with a black bow at the top. It saddened me to see how quickly they frayed, even in the drive home, and I’m not entirely sure why.
For me, it started as another morning getting ready for work. Mr. B was gone, so I had the place to myself. They were on a trip to China, a vacation. My mother was on the selfsame tour, being an employee of the travel agency who organized it, and working during it. Mr. B has an alarm clock, but it’s set to talk radio, and it goes off early in the morning. It also shuts off automatically though, so when it came on, I felt no need to shut it off, despite the fact that I hate talk radio. I wasn’t awake enough to really care. Just to sort-of listen, sort-of brush my teeth and squint into the mirror.
Now, my mother had made this same trip several times before. All I knew was when they were supposed to get back, having not been particularly interested in what airline, what schedule. From those previous trips, I had a vague idea of the way it was usually scheduled. When the first plane hit, I stopped. It was announced, of course, on the radio, whose voice had been droning in the background and that I’d been ignoring. Maybe it was the tone that caught my attention. Maybe I had just finally started to wake up. I remember sitting there, and listening, even until the second plane struck.
That’s when I became afraid. In all the other trips my mother had worked on, as far as I knew, they had had a layover in New York. That early, of course, the flight number wasn’t released. Did they have a layover this time? What airline were they on? When were they due back exactly? I called my stepfather, Brad. Of course, he didn’t know much more than I did. He was now attached to the phone, though. He told me to go to work. So to work I went. It was not a good day. I remember snapping at someone who wouldn’t leave me alone and only wanted to talk about it, as everyone was talking. At the end of my shift, I went home. My stepfather was strained, my brother was panicked. All we knew by that time was that the country was scrambling, and that it wasn’t my mom’s flight. And yet, they didn’t know about others, either. My mother hadn’t called, and they had no word on her flight. I turned on the television.
It may seem strange, but I hadn’t looked at TV all day. My instinct wasn’t to flick on the set when I heard the news. If it had been, no doubt I would have reacted almost as badly as my brother did. Seeing it for the first time almost hurt. My chest ached so hard I couldn’t believe it. Oddly enough to me now, I didn’t cry until several days later, when on the phone with a friend. Too numb, maybe? I don't know. Maybe it was just finally talking about it. All my words until then had had to do with finding out about my mom and Mr. B, and if they were all right, when they would be home. Seeing the impact... I can't describe what it made me feel. So many things at once. And yet I stayed there, watching, like some deer caught in the gleam of headlights.
My mother and Mr. B had their own adventure, of sorts. They were in the air, and fighter pilots came up to escort them. Their plane's radio wasn't working or something, because they couldn't reply to the jets. Not a good thing at the time. They were escorted, like many many others, to an airport in Canada. They couldn't come home until the borders opened again. But they came home.
The first anniversary of that day, I thought about everyone else. All the people who lost lives, all the ones left behind, and those around me. I sorrowed.
This time, my thoughts were different. I thought about the people who helped, and about the ones who would still help, and about my family. I took joy in still having it whole.
I don’t know if that’s a good thing, or a bad thing.


Kaz

Friday, September 05, 2003

*sighs*
Been a hell of a week. On the up side, I did get over being sick a while back. On the down side... had my second interview for the job I was hoping to get. I'm pretty sure I blew it at the end. I kept cool until then and all my nerves showed at once. I'll know for sure next week, sometime. Or if they don't call me at all.
Didn't have much time at all over the long weekend. Not that I ever do, since I work seven days a week, but still. Hell, I didn't even really have the holiday. Though the hospital was closed, I came in to do half the load they'd given me for Tuesday. Eight. That's a full day, all right? I mean, it depends on a lot of things - size and hair of the dog, whether they have a lot of undercoat or not, ease of handling, if the bath is medicated or not... but it comes down on average to an hour per dog. I'm not a professional dog-bather, so I'm sure that there are people out there who are lightning fast and can turn out sixteen dogs in a day, but I'm not one of them. Especially when I have to share the only tub with the groomer, who has her own animals to bathe and prepare. I've cranked out ten dogs in seven hours, and had days where eleven dogs took me ten and a half hours. It all depends. In a normal day I'll have five or so, on a good solid day eight or nine. Ten really pushes it. You know how many I would have had if I hadn't come in on Monday, and done half? Nineteen. Nine-fucking-teen. I've told them I just can't do even twelve in one day, and they scheduled nineteen goddamn animals. No, I take it back. They scheduled sixteen. There were three walk-ins that they said 'Sure, we can take them, no problem' to. Obviously, they don't ask me if I can, they just keep saying yes. And then, when I'm almost done... 'Can you do one more?' Twenty. Would have been twenty. And then what happens? They bitch at me for washing animals a day early. I need a new job.
Got a new drawing in the works. A dancing minotaur. I -meant- to begin drawing a minotaur weaving a basket, but I guess my pencil decided to go with an action pose instead. Now, I just need to draw that basket-weaver, and I can go scan a few new pics. If the person who wanted a rat anthro based on their pet April is out there, email me! I need your working email address, because she's inked and done. If you have tried to email me, try again. The rash of virus-laden emails seems to have ebbed in the yahoo address. Hotmail's still swamped.
Other stuff. Been working a bit on my writing, though mostly on editing and such. I realized most of the minotaurs in my stories are mahogany-pelted, which makes sense if you know me, but across the board in stories? ...doesn't work so good. People are getting the characters mixed up despite small differences. So, in This Stranger, My Friend, Mikaela's gotten a change of hue. When I'm a bit further along in the rewrites, I'll put them in place of the current ones. Dabbled a bit more on And I Was Cast Towards Home. Progress there! Not much... but progress! Am poking at The Hart and trying to figure out some revision that's needed there.

That's all for today. I'm done.

Kaz