Pretender to the Throne

Governor Mitt Romney has announced that he won’t be announcing his decision about whether to run for re-election until later this year, so as not to cloud the various legislative issues currently under discussion.

On the other hand, his comments that the US will become like France if it doesn’t improve its schools (if I’m not mistaken, they’re already worse than French schools) and that legalizing syringe ownership sends a bad message to kids (the message he wants to send is apparently that addicts in this state are just not sick enough and deserve to get AIDS) indicate to me that he’s going to skip the gubenatorial election and go straight for the White House in ’08. He certainly can’t win another state election if he keeps treating Boston like it’s Salt Lake City.

I often resent science fiction

I read a lot of horrible science fiction when I was in junior high school, as an escape. I loved the way that it could pull me away from a mundane world I hated so much. As I grew older I began to look down on that fear, want to engage more with the world, move away from fantasy and sci-fi. And of course I developed a little taste as well. So when I deign to read genre fiction, I shiver a little, because it reminds me of how much of a loser I was when I was younger. Then I am also reminded of how much of an insufferable snob I have become.

Anyway, the point is that a lot of genre fiction runs on a combination of badly-sewn-together myth and a detailed imaginary world, but some is genuinely good fiction that happens to take place in an incredibly detailed imaginary world. China Miéville writes this sort of thing. Deep themes, good characterization, brilliant turns of phrase (OK, a little too baroque in places, but still very well made).

I read these books and they suck me away into something else and I come up for air a day or two later and think, where have I been?

Unemployment Diary

I met a potential employment lead yesterday, at a dinner following a reading at the Harvard Bookstore given by Moorishgirl.com author Laila Lalami. Laila writes beautifully, and reads just as well. Plus, if there was ever a more beautifully alliterative name, I have not heard it– sure, silly alliterative names, but this is a good one. It was a rather odd little collection of people at dinner: three female fiction writers, Bookdwarf, and three guys: me, a software engineer married to one of the fiction writers, and a tech-writing manager married to one of the others. Hooray for continuing gender stereotypes. At any rate, tech-writing-manager guy said he didn’t have any openings at the moment but I should send him my resume just in case. There’s a chance that my skills will match their needs, and a chance that he’ll have budget to add someone. Many chances put together equal employment.

Before that, I cleaned the house and did laundry, and spent two hours at the gym. My non-career goals right now involve developing an intimidating look that can be cleaned up rapidly if I get an interview: lots of gym time, plus strategically groomed stubble.

At first I was afraid of all the effort that strategically groomed stubble would require, but really I can spend up to an hour on it every day, and still be bored and out of things to do by five.

Naming your Government Bureau

The Massachusetts unemployment insurance program is administered through a group called DET, which doesn’t seem to stand for anything. Their web page is at detma.org, but their headlines proclaim that they are representing the Division of Career Services/Division of Unemployment Assistance (DCS/DUA). I assume that they are changing their acronym from something along the lines of the Division of Employment Termination.

At least they didn’t call it Mass Unemployment.

Songs: Ohia

Word is that Songs: Ohia frontman Jason Molina’s newer efforts, under the name “Magnolia Electric Company,” just aren’t any good.

But I can’t stop listening to the song Just Be Simple (yes, it’s been in my playlist more or less constantly since September. Megan gets annoyed when I do this, because she doesn’t want to get sick of a song. But I binge.)

The lyrics are all about sticking it out and being strong, knowing that running away from problems doesn’t solve them. Of course, I aspire to feeling that way, but you know I think about getting out and putting a new address on things all the damn time. Usually that address is my grandmother’s farm, where I will become an honest workin’ man.

The song goes on “I ain’t lookin for that easy way out– my whole life’s been about try and try and try to be simple again.” Of course, I’m not trying to be simple. I’m making things incredibly complicated. I’m all about unnecessary complications. Sure, I’d love to cut out some of the things I regard as unnecessary, but that often makes things more complicated rather than less. I just dream sometimes of cutting the excess out, cut and cut and cut until everything is gone and something pure and beautiful is laid bare.

Of course, I know that, in reality, that kind of behavior just leaves you with a bloody mess.

When my grandparents bought that farm back in sixty-some, seventy-some, the guy living on it was basically making his living selling firewood. He lived on what he had: deer, a vegetable plot, firewood, squirrels, rabbits, odd jobs, a beat-to-shit pickup. I doubt he kept his teeth much past forty. Why does subsistence farming sound appealing? No health insurance, no culture, no public transit, bad food, long hours, shopping at Goodwill for work-wear. Yet it is a fantasy for a significant number of office drones and working stiffs, including me.

Grass is greener, I guess.

When Vendors Go Wild

Downtown Wine and Spirits is having its big wine sale tomorrow, including about a hundred bottles open for tasting, and a 25% discount if you get 12 or more bottles. They don’t really have to do it, but you can tell they have that big a party because they like the product they sell and they want people to be able to explore it without penalty. (Cleverly, they make their distributors supply and staff the tastings: each wholesaler gets a table and runs a mini-tasting, and the store barely has to do anything but ring up sales and clean up afterwards).

Online font vendor MyFonts.com has a service called WTF, or What The Font? where you upload an image of some text, and it tells you what font it is. It probably doesn’t sell them many more fonts, and I’ll bet it was difficlt to develop, but it seems like it would be useful to their customers– and enhance loyalty.

In both cases, you can tell that these people like the line of work they’re in, and share that enthusiasm with their customers. MyFonts has little font histories, great mockup tools, and so forth: more than they’d need just to sell a few fonts. Downtown Wine and Spirits has a fun website that carries into the store as well: they write their own little reviews and blurbs, have employee recs, and stock a much wider selection of interesting beverages than most places their size, from locally-made soda to that obscure Japanese beer made with sake yeast and red rice.

Pretty Girl with a Dirty Mouth

I missed the pre-release viewing of Sarah Silverman’s movie Jesus is Magic at the Coolidge Corner Theater last night (part of the Boston Jewish Film Festival), because it was sold out. But I saw her on Comedy Central in the Hugh Hefner roast, and in the Pam Anderson roast, and of course I saw her in the movie The Aristocrats. She was brilliant in all of them. Steve Almond gives “Jesus Is Magic” a very positive review and although I did not like his most recent book (The Evil B. B. Chow) as much as I liked his first (My Life in Heavy Metal) I trust that review. And not just because it agrees with my preconceptions. Because it agrees with my preconceptions, and Steve Almond is funny. So I plan to see “Jesus is Magic” when it comes out in general release, or on DVD.

Anyone who is intrigued should definitely read the revealing and funny New Yorker profile of her, now available online. I highly recommend her work to anyone who doesn’t mind filthy, filthy humor coming from such a pretty, pretty mouth.

Creeping sense of uselessness

Hint to anyone looking for a brilliant writer: I’m available. (Note to parents: I am also applying for jobs, not just hoping they will appear.)

Today I applied for unemployment. They let you do this by phone, and the lady on the phone was quite nice to me. They said to go to their website on Sunday and fill out another form to update them, and that from then on I would have to do that every week until I got a job. Benefits don’t kick in until my second week with no work, though.

So to be productive, I took all my rolled assorted change to the bank and deposited it. When I got home I vacuumed the apartment, and mopped the floors– and not with that wimpy swiffer-wet thing. I used the real mop, with Murphy’s Oil Soap, and plenty of elbow grease. Then I scrubbing-bubbled the sink and tub and toilet, and the floor of the bathroom. Then I took a few drops of essential eucalyptus oil M had for putting in candles, and I put it on the sponge and went over the bathroom floor and the outside of the tub and toilet again. Then I took the bristly brush and scrubbed the mildew off the shower curtain. Then I had to go back over the bathroom floor because while I was doing the shower curtain, I had got footprints and sweat all over the floor.

Then I went back to the kitchen, and washed the mop and the bucket, and filled it with clean hot water and six or ten drops of essential lemongrass oil, and re-mopped the whole apartment to make sure I hadn’t left any soap on it. This house has not been so clean since we moved in.

Now I am going to start on dinner so that when M. gets home it can be ready.

I plan to be wearing either an apron, or a dress made entirely of plastic wrap.

Personal Essay: The Layoff Story

I haven’t been posting much recently because I have had a secret that is finally out today, and I haven’t been thinking about much else lately. But today I am laid off– in Provo they say “riffed out” (from RIF: Reduction In Force) and out here in Boston I like to say “shitcanned,” but however you call it, I’m finally free to post about the impending layoff rumors which came true today. Here’s the story. (It’s not a bad one: I was about ready to leave, and I wish my employers the best of luck. Actually, as a continuing stockholder, I think that cutting costs and improving focus is the right move, and I hope that Wall Street agrees.)

You may have heard some version of this tale before. It’s not a story of business or software, but of secrets and suspicions. See, the king of a small kingdom once crossed a goddess or a nymph, they way royalty sometimes does, and she cursed him with hideous donkey’s ears. To hide them, he had a special hat made. The only people who knew about those feakish ears and the reason that tall hats were suddenly in fashion were the king and the hatmaker. So the king said to the hatmaker, if anyone finds out about these ears, your life is forfeit.

Now, a secret like that fills you up until it’s the only thing that wants to come out of your mouth. It’s like having horrible gas at a dinner party. You have to find somewhere else to get rid of it, but then everyone wonders why you’re standing off to one side of the party on your own, or why you’re hogging the bathroom so much– are you looking down on the rest of the party? Are you lonely and having a bad time? Are you taking drugs and not sharing? Are you sick and bringing infection on us all?

That’s what it’s like knowing who’s going to get laid off before they do. Managers know in advance, days or weeks in advance, that layoffs are coming: and they have to pick who goes and who stays. Within the company, officially, nothing is happening at all. Nothing to see. The same way, I hear, the Pope isn’t really all that ill until he’s completely dead. A layer-off can’t give a heads-up to anyone. It’s against the rules, it’s poor form, it’s risky: a proper layoff comes all at once, a surprise, a clean break. Knowing in advance gives people time to plan malice or sabotage, and at best makes them mopey and unproductive for their last few days or weeks.

But someone has to know the list in advance. And knowing that list means walking around with a secret too big to fit under even the tallest hat.

A secret that big fills you up so much that even if you don’t tell anyone, you start to act different. Not like a poker player with a good hand trying not to smile– more like a big gun in a thigh holster. You keep your hand near your leg, checking for its weight, ready to reach for it at any second. You walk differently, because the holster pinches the hairs on your thigh and gradually plucks it smooth. After awhile you may not notice that your walk has changed, but someone who knows how to watch people walk will know. They won’t just know you’re packing, they’ll be able to tell which leg it’s on, how long you’ve worn it, how heavy it is, how quickly you think you’ll need to pull it out and kill someone.

So if you have to fire someone next week, it’s best to just try to avoid them, so you don’t risk tipping your hand early. If they pass you in the hall and ask about the rumors in a general way, you can say, “well, yeah, there’s some cost cutting, it’s going to be rough, but the company needs to focus on its core intitiatives.” Even that is difficult. You won’t want to look them in the eye. You like them, you don’t want to lay them of. It’s not like it’s your idea. You’re just the messenger; the layoff was imposed from far above. So, if they ask for a meeting, you just put them off as long as you can. Like, maybe the day that you have to meet them to hand them their walking papers and give the mandatory exit interview.

But your best efforts to act normal are pretty unusual behavior. Take the hatmaker. He was usually a chatty guy, the townfolk’s source of fashion-related news from the court. They hear the king has started wearing a tall hat. Why tall? What makes it stay up? Will the ladies be wearing tall hats as well, or is it more of a men’s thing? And of course every time the hatmaker opened his mouth the secret tried to jump out. He couldn’t think of plausible explanations at all. He stammered. He said he was busy. He avoided all his usual gossip.

So the less you want to let on, the more obvious it becomes that you’re hiding something. If you suddenly stop returning emails, schedule all meetings for next week, don’t make eye contact, have sweaty palms, blink too much– it’s obvious something’s up. An astute observer knows what’s up pretty quickly. An astute and unscrupulous observer starts a betting pool.

When the hatmaker couldn’t stand it any more, he went down to the river, dug a hole, and whispered the secret into it. Then he covered it up and stamped it down. The mud is silent, he thought. The mud will keep my secret.

But the mud told the reeds and as everyone knows the reeds whisper in the wind, and soon the whole town knew.

When the whispering got back to the hatmaker, he could taste acid in the back of his throat along with the usual felt and feathers of a day’s work. He knew the king would have him and his special tall hat sewn into a bag together with some rocks, and thrown into the river to drown like unwanted kittens.

Or perhaps another courtier knew, and had spoken? Just like gas at a dinner party, perhaps he could pretend the stench was the dog’s fault, or the valet’s. If he ran, then everyone would know it was him, and horsemen from the king could catch him before he got to the next town, and they’d torture him for fleeing before they finally executed him. So instead of running, he waited, and went about his day as normally as he could.

On the other hand, he didn’t bother to order new hat-feathers for next week. He knew his odds: slim to none. He knew his widow would need to spend the feather money on bread for the children. And the feather merchant saw death in the hatmaker’s eyes. He was no fool either. He knew what was going on. Soon the town knew not only that the king had deformed ears, but that he was going to kill the hatmaker for spilling the secret. New hat orders dried up immediately.

And all the while, the reeds whispered and whispered. The king heard soon enough, and the soldiers came for the hatmaker, and they put him in a sack with the king’s now-useless hat, some rocks, and a few unwanted kittens, and threw the lot in the river.

Like the hatmaker, I’ve been whispering to a the online equivalent of a hole in the ground and acting like I have a secret over here. And all this while, I’ve seen the townsfolk and reeds whispering: LinkedIn invitations have been flying around, the public news sites have more information than the internal website, and everyone has been backing up their data to CD and taking it home. So I’ve known for several days now that I’m on the list of people being laid off.

Of course, I’m not being executed. I practically volunteered: it’s been a good run, I’m ready to move on. I’ve learned a lot, and now it’s time to learn something else somewhere else.

I’m being given a friendly goodbye and I hope to see my co-workers again in the future, for dinner and drinks or around a conference table at another job. I don’t know where I’m headed, but it could be practically anywhere. I could visit my brother in Bolivia. I could move to my grandmother’s farm in Ivy, VA, and raise pet goats, write freelance, sell vegetables at the farmer’s market. I could get the bird flu or drink myself to death, or go to Korea and clone myself and teach the clone to like kimchee. I could devote myself full-time to volunteer work or to stalking celebrities (OK, not that). I could move to California and grow oily dreadlocks and live out of a van.

The world is my shellfish. At least, it is for 18 months, at which point the COBRA insurance plan runs out and I get sick and die.