Last night one of our neighbors allowed his car alarm to go off – from one in the morning until who knows when (hours later). I’ve been having a terrible time sleeping, anyway, so I think I clocked in at about two or three hours tops, after going upstairs where it was infinitely quieter. I had this funny nightmare about being late to work because I was sleeping upstairs, too… I dreamed I overslept until 8:40 (after I’m supposed to be at work) and then, to top things off, couldn’t manage to drive to work because I was dizzy and kept crashing into telephone booths.
I have weird dreams sometimes.
Tonight I made a cheese-and-eggplant sandwich (Seth’s working tonight), on this funny rye stuff that isn’t sure if it’s a cracker or bread… sorta like pita bread, only crunchy. At any rate, it was pretty good. I’ve never cooked eggplant before, and I didn’t have any clue what I was doing, but I think it turned out okay. Not very filling, though!
I had some more significant things to say, but I’m really, really sleepy, and I apparently don’t have as much energy to write as I thought I did. So I think I’d better close, scoot off to get ready for bed, and save the deeper things for another day.
Tonight we went to see Finding Neverland (opens to more screens on the 24th; it’s still a limited release right now) – the movie about J.M. Barrie, writer of Peter Pan. I thought it was a rather sad movie, on many different levels, from the opening sequence to the end credits, but it was sad in an undepressing way, which is good. I don’t think I like depressing movies.
Anyway – I liked it. :-)

I had written a whole long entry about the above screenshot from a game called The Sims 2, but then a series of events intervened and my entire entry was lost amongst the discovery that my keyboard apparently requires nonrechargable batteries to run.
Suffice to say that I think that the game is trés cool.
Yes, I did indeed vote. I was a bit amazed by how utterly difficult it was. We vote here by shading in the appropriate circle across from the candidates’ names and then taking our paper to the vote-collector-person – but it was a bit confusing which circle went with which name. And the lady gave me no instructions, which left me entirely confused, so I asked. And she proceeded to tell me how to vote straight-ticket. I wish I remembered it perfectly, because I’m pretty sure she told me that you just fill in the circle for “Republican” (which she indicated) or “Democrat” (also indicated). Maybe I misunderstood her. But it wasn’t very good instructions, at any rate, and they really need to get the circles closer to the candidates’ names. I think they had way too many third-party people on there, too – I didn’t count, but it seemed to be something really excessive, like six. Peroutka, Badnarik, Nader… others I hadn’t heard of. And I’m glad I wasn’t doing a write-in, because that would’ve been really confusing – I’m not sure where you were supposed to write the name! There was no clear blank, just a word “write-in” and then a circle next to it to fill in.
So that was my first voting experience.
I thought I came to the polls somewhat prepared, having researched the US candidates (senators and representatives) and the local fellow (state representative, I think?) and decided who to vote for. Come to find out, we were also supposed to vote on school board appointments, circuit judges, some office having to do with soil management (that was particularly bewildering), and other things I’d never heard of. Along with a constitutional amendment.
Not sure how I missed the fact that Kentucky was one of the eleven states voting on gay marriage.
I voted for it, but I’m writing about it because it made me think. I’ve thought a lot about the concept of an amendment to the US Constitution, and while I definitely think that a definition of marriage is absolutely immoral if it includes anything other than one man and one woman, I’m not sure that such a thing ought to be the province of the federal government. I tend to think that the purpose of the federal government should be somewhat limited to enforcing the Constitution in all its lands and to national defense (also – I find Bush’s apparent idea that another purpose of federal government is to promote freedom elsewhere to be rather interesting). Anyway, I’m not entirely convinced about the idea of a federal constitutional amendment. But the idea of a state constitutional amendment was much easier to decide, because, well, that’s sorta what the state was invented for: to promote order. And promoting order includes declaring certain actions to be “crime,” and defining “crime” requires that one have some sort of moral base. In absolute monarchy, that moral base is determined by the monarch, and in democracy, it’s determined by the people. And I’m one of the people, so I guess I’m part of the moral base. I think gay marriage is wrong, so I voted to ban it. If the votes continue their current trend, then it shall be banned.
I should make another category and call it “job-related posts.” I think I will, actually, as soon as I’m finished with this entry. ![]()
Today was a very good day at work. It’s going well, to be disturbingly general about it; I’m turning out to be not entirely terrible at what I’m doing. I thought customers would have trouble understanding me (literally), but I’m not repeating myself too much, so I’m presuming that isn’t the case. Also, it’s rather fun to be nice all day… it’s hard to be stressed when one is being nice.
I’m getting even more used to the idea of working eight and a half hours a day… I kind of forgot about the weekend! Weekends are lovely things. I’m still kind of in disbelief that I actually get off work two days a week! (Yes, I’m being serious.)
One bad thing is that I’m not sleeping very well. I find myself needing an extraordinary amount of sleep (for me, at least), and I’m having a terrible time getting it. Last night it took me an hour to fall asleep, and I woke up about three or four times in the middle of the night. (Funny fact: I wake up when I nocturnally kick Seth, which is completely backwards since it doesn’t wake him up.) Anyway, I don’t usually have such trouble falling to sleep, but I do wake up a lot for no reason I can figure. This is very weird, because I never used to wake up in the middle of the night, and I didn’t during the first couple of months that we lived here, so presumably it’s not the regular neighborhood sounds that are waking me up. I fall back to sleep okay, but I’m coming fully awake every couple of hours, and I don’t think that makes for very useful sleeping. Thankfully my work performance (i.e., actual, measurable output) doesn’t seem to be suffering due to this, but I can tell that I’m making quite a few mistakes at work that I normally wouldn’t make, and, also, it makes it a bit harder to be in a good mood when I’m so tired!
The weather here is very funny. Oh, and it finally decided to rain!
Ps – I know I’m not responding to comments, emails, etc. It’s not exactly on purpose… I just have been very busy and haven’t yet worked out how to deal well with what time I have.
A few things I’m learning from working:
Well… my first day on the job went well, I think. I like my co-workers; they remind me very much of the folks I went to school with.
I signed loads of confidentiality agreements, so there the discussion ends. ![]()
I’m extremely, extremely tired physically, albeit not mentally. Got up much too early this morning (no, for real – I had an appointment before work).
So, tomorrow I’m off to work. Bright ‘n’ early, I might add.
I’m a bit scared. I’m a bit excited. And I have absolutely no idea what in the world I’m going to bring for lunch. ![]()
Also… Seth has midterms this week.
October is moving much more slowly than September or August did. It’s rather weird.
It’s very relieving to finally have a job. It’ll be more relieving once I actually start!
I’m somewhat amazed at how “job-alert” I’d gotten – we were driving home this evening from the WNM, and I caught myself mentally going through the businesses we passed and considering just going into one of them to apply. Then it’s like… duh, got a job already!
Seth has an interview tomorrow.
I’ve been trying to figure out our taxes lately – which is a bit of a task! Federal is pretty straightforward, except that it took me forever to find the tax tables on the IRS website. I don’t think Kentucky has tables – it’s just a straight percentage plus a certain dollar amount (for instance: $280 plus 6%). Much simpler that way. Anyway, I was trying to figure out about how much we’ll pay this year and about how much we’ll pay next year, so we can get a sensible budget worked out.
Found out that Delaware has the 48th-lowest tax-per-income rate, which is why Kentucky’s 17th-lowest rate is seeming so terribly high to me – it is! It’s so nice, though, that they don’t tax food, and I think gasoline is cheaper here.
Speaking of food, we bought a gazillion (okay, more like ten) packs of Ramen (sp?) noodles today. Seth apparently likes them… I don’t believe I’ve ever had them, but for 14¢ a package, I’m more than happy to eat them even if I don’t terribly enjoy them! I also picked up a box of all rotten (er – au gratin) potatoes, ‘cause I like them, but I haven’t managed to make any from scratch yet!
I’m very sleepy, and therefore probably making questionable amounts of sense.
Well. Now I’m being positively overrun with interviews, which is, I suppose, a very good thing.
Already had one today, which went very well. Then there’s one this afternoon, one tomorrow morning, and one tomorrow afternoon.
I have a job interview (again) Tuesday at 2:30… retail sales, again, but a bit brighter prospects, perhaps. From looking on the ‘net, I had to have actually passed this personality test to have even gotten called. No idea how much it pays, but at least it’s not a straight commission job.
This is cross-posted from my other journal…
jobness
Much to my astonishment and much to the humbling of my pride, I still haven’t been able to find a job. I estimate I’ve applied to well over a hundred jobs. I’ve had interviews, some of which went marvelously well (I think I’m a good interviewee), but… no jobs. I got to the end of an interview on Friday, and the fellow had finished telling me about all the benefits and figuring out how much per month I’d have to pay to have health insurance on Seth and I, and telling me about all the little details of the dress code – I think I’d pretty much gotten the job, at least that was the way he was talking – and then he says, oh, by the way, we require all our employees to work at least two Sundays a month. He negotiated it down to one Sunday afternoon between church services, but I still couldn’t do that, and he couldn’t budge any farther.
I’m learning a lot about a lot of things (including myself) in this business of unemployment, like about trusting God to provide, and being much humbled (I went to college, graduated with honors, and I can’t even get the jobs that don’t require a high school diploma?). It’s also made me very eager to work and more understanding of the value of money. Provided that I don’t promptly forget everything I’ve learned, I’m sure I’ll look back at this as a good/helpful time. And I’m trying very hard to rest in God’s sovereignty now, but honestly, I’m struggling with not being stressed and discouraged, and even sometimes a bit afraid of where the money’s going to come from if I don’t get a job.
Please, please pray for us. That we’ll keep our perspective right and trust wholly and completely in God’s providence, and also that we’ll find a job.
sinness
But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh… But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law. And those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires. (Galations 5:16, 22-24)
Church this morning brought this to mind, although the sermon was on the Prodigal Son, of all things. I think I used to think that the fruit of the Spirit and the gifts of the Spirit were sorta the same thing – that we got some of them and not others, but that all were good. But not so; these things are the fruit (singular…) of the Spirit. This is what comes to bear in the life of a believer.
I was musing this morning – many of these, I don’t have very much of. I’m so far from perfect, I’m so depraved apart from grace. And the question arose in my mind: Why isn’t my sin more offensive to me? I’m not worthy of any of God’s grace, and yet He has bestowed it so bountifully, so why do I persist in stumbling? Why, when I am so determined to speak with gentleness and patience, do I instead speak in anger and hurtfulness?
My mind knows the “right” answers, but my heart isn’t satisfied with them. I ache to be free, to be pleasing, to stop doing those things which I do not want to do!
Every year since 2001 (at least), I’ve toyed with the idea of doing NaNoWriMo. And every year, I’ve been knee-deep in schoolwork, and only too aware that second-third midterms generally come smack in the beginning of November, and that writing 1,667 words of fiction every day would be somewhat hindersome to my schoolwork. So every year, I’ve decided to be a nonparticipant. But now I’ve gone off and graduated, so the wheels are churning again. It’d be a bit easier to figure out if I already had a job – I don’t know how much “time” I’ll actually have in a day after working and houseworking and such – but the idea is interesting, at least. ![]()
On another note, Seth and I have started having a sort of “ice cream night” at our house on Sunday evenings after church. Tonight was only the second time, but we talked about it a bit afterwards and would like to continue. It’s kind of more brainy-philosophical than it is social; much food-for-thought going on. Although I also put a bit more effort into the real food tonight – in addition to an array of ice cream, we had fresh-baked Swedish chocolate bread (a very hard bread, but yummy) and Japanese fruit pie. I like entertaining, I think, although I’m always a bit nervous.
Well… managed to fail another personality test today.
JC Penny’s.
We spent the bulk of the afternoon and early evening going around in malls and asking for and submitting applications (and résumés) for every retail store that looked remotely interesting. Toys ‘R’ Us looks somewhat promising, but we’ll see.
Also got a bit of freelancing done this morning, so I am making a very little bit of money, but please do pray for us and that I would find a job!
Just the things Julie writes.
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