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I’m Not There: Housekeeping! This frat house smells like a frat house

June 15th, 2011

May sucked. (I know that’s just, like, my opinion, man … maybe it went better for you.)

Mine was rainy. And I celebrated my 100th birthday. (Is that the one where you get paper, diamonds or dust? I can’t remember.)

But the thing that made me wanna punch May in the face was the fact I had three massive, unrelated projects due within a week of each other.

At the start of the month-long grind, friends would text saying they were headed out for a brew and I’d reply: “Fiddlesticks! I gotta work. :( Have one for me, though! XOXO!”

Two weeks in, it was: “Working. I’ll drink when I sleep.”

In the final days, I had to fight not to write: “Cool. I’ll meet you at that new bar on the corner of I’mStillWorkingYouAsshat and JamIt. 8 good for you?”

Not surprisingly, my attitude wasn’t the only thing that took a nosedive.

Now that I’m exactly 24 hours away from the Deadline, I’ve had a chance to see things outside the glow of the computer. it ain’t pretty.

My hair looks like it was styled by an angry flock of birds, the dishes and laundry are piled in disturbingly high stacks and I’m going to have to work a little too hard to figure out which plastic Target bags are filled with unopened toiletries and which are filled with trash. (Yes, I’m pretty. We’ve discussed this.)

Weirdly, my place doesn’t yet smell like a frat house. That’s a distinct stank, a special mixture of cigarettes, underarms, stale beer soaked into the carpet padding, urine, boy socks, and balloons. (If you don’t know what might produce a balloon smell, you need to practice safer sex.)

I know that smell, well, because I lived in a frat house for a month once. I needed a place for a few weeks and my buddy suggested I take one of the empty rooms at his frat.

“The location is great, the rent is like $200 … the smell might get to you, but just leave the windows open.”

Matt wasn’t kidding. the walls were white — underneath pictures. Doorways were stacked with laundry. after noticing ancient, dried Ramen on the ceiling, petrified gunk on every cupboard and grease stains of various ages slathering everything, I decided to eat out that month.

The bathrooms we won’t speak of.

As I moved my things into the house — the hallway carpet making wet, squishing sounds underfoot into the bedroom where snot goblins were strategically placed on the wall at bed height (yes, I’m for-realing you) — I reminded myself it was for a month, and that I’d spend that month mostly outside.

When I finally moved across town into the apartment I’d been waiting to open up, I swore never to willfully live in filth like that again. And yet here I am on the precipice of putridity. (Incontheivable!)

Thankfully, the May deadlines ended just shy of a hopeless housekeeping backslide.

Roaches do not skitter madly away when I flick the lights on suddenly, the carpet doesn’t squish (I can even see parts of it) and the house only smells of stale cake, smoke and shame.

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Bangkok Post : Embedding a good value system

June 3rd, 2011

‘I normally employ active listening in my management style regardless of whether I agree with an issue. When it comes time to make a final decision, the ultimate goal is the benefits accrued to the organisation itself and society at large,” says Dr Prasarn Trairatvorakul, governor of the Bank of Thailand.

Dr Prasarn is not a new face at the central bank. he served there from 1983-92 before moving to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) as a deputy secretary-general. he then headed the SEC as secretary-general from 1999 to 2003 before moving to Kasikornbank (KBank) to serve as president, then back to the central bank last October after being appointed as its new governor.

“I always consider both the ‘hardware’ and the ‘software’. The hardware is what’s tangible such as organisational direction, targets and performance. such systematic and scientifically measured items are useful for management. A good value system is one piece of software, very important for sustaining an organisation,” he says.

Taking away the punchbowl: “Three core values – being principled, having foresight and acting down-to-earth – were introduced before my time by the previous governor, Tarisa Watanagase. On my first day as governor, I sent out a letter to all the central bank staff reiterating these values and including a fourth – reaching out. We’re doing fine on the first two values but still have room to improve on the other two.”

To be more down to earth, Dr Prasarn believes the Bank of Thailand must think more in terms of “practical policies”. that entails vigilance and allowing staff to acquire broader experience such as by working with outside organisations for a while and then returning to the central bank.

He referred to a famous quote by William McChesney Martin Jr, the longest-serving chairman of the US Federal Reserve (1951-70), who said the job of a central bank is to “to take away the punchbowl just as the party gets going”.

“Our work involves other parties, so we must reach out to the others. This way, we can expect good cooperation if we have to make some tough decisions,” says Dr Prasarn.

Recognition and rewards: A good value system is the foundation of good human resource management, and that of the central bank is crucial in achieving its goals. To this end, Dr Prasarn has adopted a “balanced score card” to as his measurement tool.

“Our board last December approved a variable pay scheme that will take effect this July. such recognition will be the first of its kind and very rewarding. Staff performance evaluations including for the governor will be made every six months,” Dr Prasarn boasts proudly.

He is one of only a few senior executives who have been at the top of powerful public and private organisations alike, as witnessed by his tenure as KBank president.

“Managing a public organisation is certainly different from running a private enterprise. Performance cannot be measured as clearly since there is true competition in the private sector but not on the public side. Being process-driven is the one similarity. Unfortunately, a process culture does not encourage people to be flexible or aware of changes in the environment,” says Dr Prasarn.

Leading with a coaching mindset: “Human skills capability is at the top of the list of leadership qualities. Understanding basic management needs such as an incentive system and what drives people to perform is no.2. The third quality leaders must have is coaching skills and the ability to provide feedback; leaders must be brave enough to accept reality and give feedback that will improve poor performers,” says Dr Prasarn.

A strong people-oriented executive, he was a key figure at a critical juncture in Thai history – the 1973 student uprising, when he was the student body president at Chulalongkorn University.

“My student activities developed a sense of human resource management in me, taught me how to delegate authority. My personal leadership approach tends to be consultative with some degree of a participatory style. I prefer to articulate and make myself crystal clear so that others will understand the issues. Buy-ins from my team members are important, but there may be a critical moment in which it falls to me to take a position and decide,” concludes Dr Prasarn.

Sorayuth Vathanavisuth is a former chief executive of the Thailand Management Association and now teaches at Mahidol University’s College of Management. he can be reached at .

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_tamagotchi: Hello!

February 21st, 2011

Current mood: hungryCurrent music:Morgenstern – Rammstein

Hello!Hi, I’m new! XD my name is Cassandra, and I love Tamagotchis (they are mighty cute). I still have my old ones, from when they first came out a million years ago. I bought a Tamagotchi Connection version 2 two weeks ago while I was out with a friend, and I found it buried in the “Stuff no one wants to buy” cart at K-Mart. XD;;I need help identifying a tamagotchi, though. first it turned into Furawatchi and then the matchmaker came, Furawatchi fell in love with some plant-thing, and had a kid. then a few days later Furawatchi leaves me her child like a deadbeat mom and I raised it to Ichigotchi. then today it changes into this weird.. THING. It floats, has three or so blobby legs, a long nose-thing, and antenna. I drew a picture to better illustrate it’s weirdness. this is what I can remember of what it looked like, because I put it in the mimitchi costume and I can’t look at it for reference (also why I couldn’t take a picture XD;).my friend said “He’s weird but cute. Like a tamagotchi clown!”

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Bishop Dan’s Blog: Christian Speech And The Arizona Shootings

February 16th, 2011

Having heard a lot of confessions, some as a priest, some as a lawyer, I am rarely shocked by words. But I was taken aback by something I head in my parents’ living room a few years ago. my background is what sensitized me to this particular statement.

When I was in Junior hi in Texas, in the early 1960’s, it was not at all unusual to hear the other kids talking about how somebody needed to kill John Kennedy. his murder was a popular fantasy, but one taken lightly – until Nov. 22, 1963. The following days, for those of us who lived them, can never be forgotten. The flag draped casket, the riderless horse, Mike Mansfield’s eulogy “And she took the ring from her finger and placed it in his hand.” It was the first wave of national grief, but not the last in that bloody decade. That time marked me in a way I had not fully grasped until a few years ago.

I was in my parents’ living room when one of my young relatives began talking of how he wanted to assassinate President Clinton. He wasn’t planning it. He didn’t express the intent to actually do it. But he thought it would be highly satisfying. He wanted to do it and said so freely. That is one time, I was truly shocked. Despite all the years that had passed, I felt myself once again to be a Texan, to remember the shame that the President had been murdered in my state, and now to hear this young Texan, my kin, eager to relive that evil day was more than I could grasp. I was not polite.

I don’t know what to make of the murders in Arizona. I don’t know whether there is any direct connection to any ideology or the political rhetoric of our time. But I do turn to my faith and what little I know of human nature to help me reflect.

I start with the premise that God does not make murderers and does not send people out like Manchurian candidates to do evil. And I take to heart the message of Reinhold Niebuhr’s classic, Moral Man, Immoral Society in which he said we are each much better as individuals than we are as a society, that society, though necessary to fully human life, is fallen and makes us do things that are beneath us. Mobs commit atrocities few individuals do. The lone gunman is not lowered by a machine onto the human stage. The lone gunman is formed in a society. The most broken fall prey to our darkest passions and perform the darkest acts on behalf of the worst sentiments in our collective spirit.

My young kinsmen never took at shot at President Clinton but he gave voice to something that we have neither owned nor extinguished. sometimes a broken person is too weak to resist it and becomes its agent. Language is our best way to know what a society believes, feels, and values. my young kinsman said the murder of a leader is good. The rhetoric of our contemporary politics is violent, murderous – “the second amendment alternative.”

Christianity is, in an important sense, a special language. It is the language we speak to suggest, to hint at, to point toward “things to deep for words.” It is a language of creation, appreciation, mercy, and reconciliation. That makes it a language quite at odds with most contemporary political language. Yet it is not anti-political. Politics is by definition the practice of a common life, a sharing of authority, a caring for each other. It is the so-called “political” rhetoric of our time that is actually anti-political. It is the language of faith that makes an authentic politics possible.

This is why it is absolutely essential that Christians speak on matters of the common good, that we speak in the public square, that we articulate the demands of justice. Christianity is not a political ideology, as much as some on the left and the right alike, have claimed. Christians do not necessarily agree on matters of politics and economics. But Christians speak (or when they are true to Christianity should speak) of these things in a distinctively Christian way – a way that is non-violent, because Christians live in hope, and violence is always an act of despair. (Robert Cover, Violence & The Word, Yale Law Journal).

The voices of violence are shouting in our time. The anger and contempt are in long supply. And we speak too little, far too little. sometimes, I see people in the church behave as if they were at a town hall meeting spewing hate. I see the ways of the world informing the Body of Christ, while the Body of Christ muzzles itself rather than inform the ways of the world. if Christians speak, and Christians are obliged by our Baptismal Vows to speak, on matters of justice, we speak differently in two ways. first, we speak in prayer – prayer for guidance, prayer of intercession, and prayer of contrition. second, we speak prophetically – but prophetic speech is not simple or easy.

To speak prophetically is to say what we believe to be God’s will. To speak prophetically, we have to subordinate so much. We have to subordinate our pride, our ego, our self-interest. above all we have to sacrifice our political and economic ideologies. This is particularly hard for leftists with secularist anti-religious ideologies and for rightist with Darwinian ideologies – both of which are challenged by Christianity. It is hard, hard, hard to resist the temptation to paint the face of Christ on whatever already fits our ideology.

Then, having died to self that we may speak for God, it is incumbent upon us to speak reverently. That means refusing to claim we know God with greater certainty or precision than we really do. We must be able to say “Thus sayeth the Lord – I think.” (Niebuhr, On Christian Tolerance) if we subject all our other beliefs to God, and acknowledge our uncertainty of God’s will, then we will, of necessity, speak more gently and listen more attentively to one another.

Clearly, not all Christians have spoken with the kind of non-violence and humility. We have the regrettable Battle Hymn of the Republic in with “He hath loosed the fateful lightning of his terrible swift sword” etc. Christian violence is an oxymoron but one that has too often obscured the light of Christ. Our first duty is to repudiate evil spoken in the name of Jesus and to claim the truth of our tradition.

If we add our voices, along with the voices of peace, wisdom, and hope from other faith traditions, we can, by grace, counter at least some of venomous voices that poison souls, especially the souls of broken, vulnerable people.

In the wake of the Arizona shootings, I hope we will speak to God, to each other, and to the world in an authentically Christian way. I hope we will pray for the victims of violence and the perpetrators of violence who wound themselves most grievously. I hope we will repent of our own violence, our own intemperate words and deeds – knowing that every word and action ripples out into the world in good and evil ways greater than we intend or foresee. I hope we will rededicate ourselves to mercy and the mission to reconcile all people to each and to God in Christ.Dona nobis pacem.

avalon Hill , ,

RoboDoc 2009 Dvdrip ?ndir ?zle – ?zle – ?ndir – Download – Online …

November 11th, 2010

RoboDoc 2009 Dvdrip ?ndir ?zle

IMDB
» RoboDoc (2009)

Yönetmen: Stephen Maddocks
Tür: Comedy,Sci-Fi
Ülke: USA
Dil: English
Puan: 5.6/10  (16 oy)
Oyuncular (ilk 5): Alan Thicke, David Faustino, Corin Nemec, David DeLuise, Michael Winslow

IMDB: imdb.com/title/tt0893367/

Plagued by uninsured patients, greedy insurance companies, heartless health care conglomerates, and stressed out doctors, the health care delivery system is on the verge of a total breakdown – and Jake Gorman couldn’t be happier. The egomaniacal medical malpractice attorney has it all. His face adorns billboards, his ads run constantly on TV and radio, while his army of informants tip him off to profitable new cases. Suing doctors has made Jake a famous and very wealthy man. Jake never met a doctor he couldn’t sue, until now. As a cost cutting measure at its hospitals, R.I.P Healthcare has developed the perfect doctor. MD 63 (a.k.a. Robo-Doc) is a robotic doctor whose data bank contains all the medical knowledge in the world, and therefore Robo-Doc CAN’T make a mistake. Robo-Doc was designed to save both money and lives. Success would bring flawless, affordable health care to all and spell ruin for Jake Gorman.

rapidshare.com/files/313447937/RoboDoc.2009.DVDRip.XviD-BeStDivX.DepoDepo.Fr.Mahmut2000.part4.rar
rapidshare.com/files/313448235/RoboDoc.2009.DVDRip.XviD-BeStDivX.DepoDepo.Fr.Mahmut2000.part1.rar
rapidshare.com/files/313448256/RoboDoc.2009.DVDRip.XviD-BeStDivX.DepoDepo.Fr.Mahmut2000.part3.rar
rapidshare.com/files/313448308/RoboDoc.2009.DVDRip.XviD-BeStDivX.DepoDepo.Fr.Mahmut2000.part2.rar

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Robert Citino: On Being a Wiking

November 3rd, 2010

Roundup: Historians’ TakeRobert Citino: On Being a Wiking

Source:

avalon Hill ,

Social Media Marketing – Hot topic? | Ant Hodges | Social Media …

November 1st, 2010

Some people argue that the whole social media thing is a fad, flash-in-the pan or craze that will fade out and become the Tamagotchi of the business marketing world. I heard recently a web design agency saying that they don’t build social media into websites for this very reason… it wont be around that long.

Do you think you can run your business and not get involved in this social media fad?

Consider the following stats – and by showing you these they will already be out of date as soon as you read them as all stats are, but it gives you a flavour. (Source: Compete.com)

Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter received more than 170million unique visitors (collectively) in the month of August 2010.

As it stands, Google and Yahoo are the only websites that receive more daily traffic than Facebook. With the AOL thing going on with Yahoo and the current trends in the social media ether, I suggest that it may not be that way for much longer. See the graph below:

According to TheFutureBuzz.com

tamagotchi ,

Domestic Short Hair – Gray and white – Tracey – Small – Adult …

October 30th, 2010

  • Details forDomestic Short Hair – Gray and white – Tracey – Small – Adult
  • Address:P.O. Box 125, Metropolis, IL 62960 (map)
  • Date Posted:10/27/10
  • Age:Adult
  • Gender:Female
  • Offered by:Shelter

Description Domestic Short Hair – Gray and white – Tracey – Small – Adult

Hi. I’m Tracey and I’m a very sweet 2 year old kitty. I’m looking for a loving fur-ever home as I’ve been here at the shelter a long time. I’m ready to lay on the couch and look out the window and watch the birds. Won’t you come adopt me? I’ve been spayed, feline leukemia tested, microchipped and I’m UTD on all vaccines. For more info on this pet or on completing an adoption form, please call Project Hope at 618-524-8939, Tues-Sat. 1-5 p.m., or visit in person at 1698 W. 10th St. in Metropolis, IL. You may also request an adoption form by emailing us. (added 10-26-10)

CHARACTERISTICS:
Breed: Domestic Short Hair – gray and white
Age: Adult
Size: Small
Gender: Female
Offered by: Shelter
Petfinder ID: 17768138

ADDITIONAL INFO:
Pet is house trained
Pet has been spayed/neutered

CONTACT:
Project Hope Humane Society | Metropolis, IL | 618-524-8939

For additional information, reply to this ad or see: petfinder.com/petnote/displaypet.cgi?petid=17768138

Brought to you by Petfinder.com

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Tekkotsu

October 29th, 2010

Tekkotsu is a opensource educational robotics platform developed at CMU. They design low cost robot prototypes as well as well designed C++ robotic library and working environment. So that students could learn to program a robot by writing very high level c++ code rather than dealing with vision motor control etc. themselves.

I asked the author’s opinion about MS robotic studio. He replied with two major drawbacks

(2) the controller need to be run on a PC which is not convenient for mobile robots and communication between PC/robot may need substantial amount of time.

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Beautiful Oops! is a must-read of 2010 | BabyCenter

October 26th, 2010

I get a lot of books. As in if you could see my desk, you couldn’t see me.

What I write about here on the blog is only the best of that glorious avalanche, the stuff that catches my eye and engages my two test listeners and proto-readers, Stella and Theo (and sometimes their buddies Willie, Sadie, Sylvie, and Nora).

I’ve learned that best of the best are the volumes that make both parent and child exclaim, “Wow, that’s cool.”

Beautiful Oops! by Barney Saltzberg is that kind of book.

Just out and weighing in at only 28 pages in a 7-inch by 7-inch package, it’s a spectacular burst of discovery and life lesson in a little package.

The premise is simple: Imperfection happens. Everybody makes mistakes, things spill, and pages get torn. But none of this is something to cry over. All is not lost — those mistakes can lead to fun and better, more gorgeous outcomes.

Saltzberg conveys this message by filling his pages with rips that turn in to crocodiles, spilled paint that turns into a family of birds or playful puppies, and holes that lead to an unexpected viewfinder of colorful pages:

(WARNING: Kill your sound to skip a less than stellar musical rendition of this book — sorry, Barney.)

Saltzberg is the author of Good Egg, which was, well, good. But this is better.Stella, the jaded 5-year-old teenager, wanted to instantly read Beautiful Oops! again and 3-year-old Theo took the book and started exploring on his own.

In a world where the cultural pressure seems to be you-must-be-perfect (from the continuing obsession with fame to, well, the first-grade level of homework they send home in kindergarten), it’s such a welcome relief to encounter a book where the mistakes aren’t doorways to frustration, but instead lead to opportunities.

And who wouldn’t wish for their kid the ability — the strength — to be able to roll with the punches, regroup, and live beautifully?

Beautiful Oops! is published by Workman Publishing and is available from $11.95 at retailers like Amazon.

Disclosure: Workman Publishing does not advertise on BabyCenter. They did however send me this book, which I, Mrs. Dadler, and Stella all literally finished with a, “Wow, that’s cool.” By the way, a friend took Beautiful Oops! to her 8-year-old daughter’s art class and that teacher is planning to teach the book in the class.

Like what you’re reading? Bookmark “The Dadler” and don’t miss a word.

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Top 10 Electronic Projects and Circuits September 2010

October 25th, 2010

Let’s see the top 10 electronic circuits and projects for September 2010. As you probably know, we publish this top 10 on monthly bases and we try to show you the most viewed articles on electroschematics.com in that month. For accesing the past related articles please use this tag: top 10 projects and circuits or check out the right sidebar.

September 2010 Top Projects and Circuits

  1. Solar charger
    A solar charger circuit to charge Lead Acid or Ni-Cd batteries using solar energy. The circuit harvests solar energy to charge a 6 volt 4.5 Ah rechargeable battery for various applications. The charger has Voltage and Current regulation and Over voltage cut off facilities.
  2. Dog repellent
    The electronic dog repellent circuit diagram below is a high output ultrasonic transmitter which is primarily intended to act as a dog and cat repeller, which can be used individuals to act as a deterrent against some animals.
  3. Wind powered battery charger
    In this wind powered battery charger circuit the dc motor is used as a generator. The voltage output is proportional to its rpm. The LTC1042 monitors the voltage output and provides the following control function.
  4. Cheap metal detector
    The working principle of this cheap and easy to build metal detector circuit consists in mixing two equal frequencies which causes a low-frequency interference. When one of the oscillators become unstable then the frenquency of the interference will be modified. The metal detector circuit is built with CD4011.
  5. Led searchlight
    This LED searchlight comprises a sealed maintenance-free (SMF) battery, constant voltage battery charger, six high efficiency white LEDs and a LED light level control circuit.
  6. Mobile bug
    This handy mobile bug or cell phone detector, pocket-size mobile transmission detector or sniffer can sense the presence of an activated mobile cellphone from a distance of one and-a-half metres. So it can be used to prevent use of mobile phones in examination halls, confidential rooms, etc.
  7. PIR sensor light switch
    By using these readymade and pre-configured PIR sensors, even an average electronics hobbyist can construct his/her own Motion Sensor Unit. The one evening project presented here is based on a common and very popular PIR module SB0061
  8. Solar garden light
    This Outdoor LED Solar Garden Lights project is a hobby circuit of an automatic garden light using a LDR and 6V/5W solar panel. During day time, the internal rechargeable 6 Volt SLA battery receives charging current from the connected solar panel.
  9. Touch switch
    Here is a great collection of touch switch circuits. A touch switch is an electronic device that enables us to control a circuit by simply touching a sensor.
  10. Wireless light switch
    The wireless light switch circuit described here requires no physical contact for operating the appliance. You just need to move your hand between the infrared LED and the phototransistor . The infrared rays transmitted by IR LED is detected by the phototransistor to activate the hidden lock, flush system, hand dryer or else.

Electronic Pets ,

On Tour… KARELIA Timeless World Of Forests And Lakes

October 23rd, 2010

Top Tips for Adopting a Shelter Dog

October 17th, 2010

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Electronic Pets , ,

A final note on my takeaways from the 2010 APSA annual meeting:

October 4th, 2010

Living for Someday Is No Way to Live

September 28th, 2010

Three months ago, I would have scoffed at the idea of renewing my lease and settling down into post-collegiate life in Madison.  Phase one of my Wisconsin exit strategy  was in full swing – I networked like a banshee at SXSW, contacted everyone from alumni to people my mom sends Christmas cards to, and was geared up to send out job applications en masse.  When I got a call to interview for a position here in Madison at Epic, I figured if anything, I should take the chance to sharpen my skills.  For once, I wasn’t a bundle of nerves during an interview, and things went surprisingly well.  In spite of that, I was still shocked when I got a call two weeks later offering me a position as a Recruiter.

That wasn’t part of The Plan.

For the better part of the last few years, I’ve been living only for the future.  Rarely have I done something spontaneously simply because it’s rewarding in and of itself – most everything has been a component of some overarching “bigger picture” that I’ve thoughtfully mapped out (and I did literally map it out as part of a long-term career path project for my capstone marketing course).  I somehow convinced myself that it wasn’t a big deal that I had no social life because I’d have one someday. I’d stick my neck out and try to make some new friends someday. I’d be happy…someday.

Here’s one thing you won’t learn in business school: there’s something wholly unsatisfying about living your life as though it’s a 5 year corporate strategy.  Maybe that strikes many of you as being obvious, but as someone who thrives in a structured environment, that realization hasn’t come to me overnight.  It’s easy to get sucked into the mentality that you’ll achieve that elusive sense of completion once you starting hitting the milestones of The Plan.  I hit the first milestone when I landed my gig at a marketing firm here; to put it bluntly, I didn’t feel fulfilled in the slightest.

So when I accepted my new job, I threw The Plan out the window.  To paraphrase Jason Fried, plans are irrelevant.  Externalities are a bitch.  You’ll run yourself ragged (and miss the bigger picture) if you always try to re-chart your course of action to accommodate for them.

The question I wish I had been asking myself throughout my job search is “What do I want to be TODAY?”  Many of us get so caught up in the throes of finding the elusive “perfect job” that we rarely pause to re-evaluate and expand our search to consider other options.  Had I stuck to the straight and narrow of my idealized career path, chances are I’d still be grinding away doing the same rather uninspiring work that I should have loved because I loved my major.  Yikes.

For the time being, the future I’m concerned with extends only as far as next weekend (don’t worry Mom, I’m still contributing to my 401(k)), and it’s liberating in a way I never expected.

Stop micromanaging your life and living for someday.  All the planning and foresight in the world is useless if it causes you to miss tremendous opportunities that are right in front of you.  Feeling directionless is terrifying, but so is being blind to a world of unconsidered possibilities.

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