Perhaps my
last entry wasn't the best lead-off post after a long absence. I wrote it a few days ago, when I was completely drained and exhausted. No, there is no Big Thing going on... an infinitesimal climb in my tumor markers and some pathetic kidney performance, but these things are hardly worth mentioning. However, when combined with sleep deprivation and routine upheaval caused by my new job, well
perhaps I overreacted, and I took you all down with me. I'm sorry for making you feel blindsided, dear Internets. Please let me assure you:
I am fine.
Seriously.
You can stop sending me "Oh my god what happened??" emails.
Seriously. (Just kidding, those of you who wrote me made my heart swell to three times its size and I just adore you.)
Truth is, besides some minor setbacks, I am quite good. It was extremely difficult for me to transition into the working world at first, when I realized that my employer really does expect me to show up on time, every day, and traffic in the city really is as bad as they say. I had a rough patch getting used to the whole Get Up in the Morning/Stay Awake All Day business, which is when I wrote my last post, but most of those kinks have been ironed out. I am proud to say that I have a two-week perfect attendance streak going, and my supervisor actually called me a "Star Pupil." Yay.
I know that someday it will just be my job, so I am glad to have this forum to document the current happy phase when the historic building is still gorgeous and everyone still asks me how I am liking it so far. I love this time when everything is fresh and you can mentally catalogue your coworkers as you meet them (The fundamentalist Christians, Women who walk laps around the parking garage during lunch, People who are outraged at every perceived injustice or minor procedural change, People who hate me no matter how nice I am because I happen to be young/white/female/thin/short/smoker/no reason whatsoever, Emasculated single men who have nothing to offer the ladies anymore except their place in the microwave line, and of course, the Chatty Cathies - no office would be complete without them).
And since everyone seems to be so very interested in what happened and what is going on, Rae?, here it is... What's Happenin': What Rae's Been Doing to Acclimate Herself to Her New Job.
1. Identify and befriend smokers. This, of course, is the single most crucial aspect of the new-job process.
2. Shamelessly flirt with lonely quiet guy who knows how to fix the computers, cocky meathead guy who can beat the vending machine into submission, and the geeky gangly guy who has memorized every word of the benefits package. Convince all three that I secretly loathe the other two.
3. Repeatedly tell supervisor that she just has to tell me where she shops, because she is always wearing the cutest outfits and did I mention I love love LOVE your haircut?? And the kicker? It is totally sincere, I heart her.
4. Find isolated spot to eat lunch in order not to upset the ladies who eat an apple and a single leaf of lettuce for lunch. It only took one day of them glaring at 90-pound me scarfing down my fettucine alfredo to learn they needed some space during lunch.
5. Find every conceivable reason to call the Audiology Department. Stay on the phone with them longer than needed. Always offer to do a favor for them, up to and including picking up lunch for them even though they are in a building over a mile away. Repeat as neccessary until the world-famous audiologist Dr. FancyPants notices me.
6. Oh yeah, learn how to do my job.
7. Attempt to smuggle Hank into work in my purse. When this fails, plaster pictures of dogs on every visible surface. Look confused when coworkers ask why I don't have any pictures of my boyfriend.
8. Spend majority of first paycheck on work clothes, since The World's Largest Pleated Skirt and Cardigan Set Collection (twelve years of Catholic school, okay? I go with what I know) does not fit my post-cancer waifish figure. Try to remember the last time I bought myself clothes, but can't.
9. Miss friends in the computer very, very much.