Category: Everything Else

  • #VlogMoms: First Jobs

    OK. So I’m submitting my first ever vlog as part of #VlogMoms, and it took me a million tries, and I hate my face and the way my voice sounds, and then once I finally got through it the bloody thing is nearly SIX MINUTES LONG. It kills me because I’m pretty good at public speaking… next time I’m filming from a lectern.

    Certainly I have zero expectations of you sitting through six minutes of my stilted nonsense, so I’ve written up the general gist below (from what I remember saying; I’m not watching it again). However, I’m going ahead and posting this just so next week I’ll be able to see just how much I improved… seriously, I’ve got no place to go but up.

    Hiya. I’m Robin and I’m trying to step out of my comfort zone a little bit, so this is my first submission for the Vlog Moms.

    The prompt this week comes from the delightfully adorable Annie Schultz aka Mama Dweeb, and she wants to know about jobs we had in high school or college.

    I worked a lot. I worked selling subscriptions for a theater company over the phone– I don’t recommend it– I worked in a comic book store in the mall, I flipped waffle fries briefly at Chick Fil A. I worked at a tuxedo rental place called Smalls Formalwear, I ran the cashier at the Hickory Farms kiosk during Christmas season, and I worked at a camera supply store that catered to professionals.

    The best job I ever had was revamping the filing system at an insurance office, the summer between my junior and senior year. This was 1993, so before everything lived on a computer. There was this huge wall of file cabinets, and whenever there was paperwork for an account it kinda just got shoved in the file. So my job was to come in, take each file, separate out the quotes and the policies and the correspondence and the payment slips and the everything else, then arrange them by chronological order, most recent on top, highlight the dates, then hit em with the hole punch and secure them in binders. Then, I got to label them with a label gun and color-coordinated tape.

    I worked with one other girl, who was a few years older than me and went to college in one of the Carolinas. It was through her that I learned that people still listen to country music in present day times. Her name was Erin, and she had a very pert nose and perfect teeth and short curly hair and a deep tan and the face of Sarah McLachlan. She looked like the kind of girl who probably went surfing on the weekends, you know? Sunny and athletic and tousled.

    Erin and I had a lot of fun. We worked with our shoes off and the radio on. That was the summer that Sheryl Crow exploded on the scene, and every time All I Wanna Do came on she’d make us stop what we were doing to sing along and dance. I still do that when that song comes on the radio.

    Erin was the best, most active listener I have ever met. If she was here listening to me right now she would have asked what colors I used with the label gun. When I admitted I worked at Chick-Fil-A she would have mock gasped and been like nooooooo not you!

    And when I talked about the girl who made me feel like I was a storyteller, who always made me feel interesting and funny, she would have leaned in and said that she sounded like a fantastic person to know and that I was so lucky to have met her at that lonely and insecure time of my life.

    And I was lucky. I think about her all the time. It’s because of her I tell stories. I think about the details she would have asked for, the turns of phrase that would have made her crack up and tell me I was something else.

    I don’t have her address or anything so your hate mail will have to continue to come to me. But at least now you know who to blame 🙂

    To see much better videos than mine check out the other VlogMoms participants this week:


     

     

  • I am a Walking Contradiction and I am OK with That. (Quiet: the Power of Introverts in a World that Can’t Stop Talking)

    I am a Walking Contradiction and I am OK with That. (Quiet: the Power of Introverts in a World that Can’t Stop Talking)

    audrey hepburn costume

    You once said that you would like to sit beside me while I write. Listen, in that case I could not write at all. For writing means revealing oneself to excess; that utmost of self-revelation and surrender, in which a human being, when involved with others, would feel he was losing himself, and from which, therefore, he will always shrink as long as he is in his right mind… That is why one can never be alone enough when one writes, why there can never be enough silence around one when one writes, why even night is not night enough.

    Franz Kafka, as quoted in ‘Quiet: the Power of Introverts in a World that Can’t Stop Talking’

    When I was young I was painfully shy. Excruciatingly so. I had a stutter, which presented a chicken or the egg sort of problem; no one could tease out if the stutter caused the social ineptitude, or whether social anxiety brought the stutter on.

    Entering the school experience at kindergarten, I was subjected to testing after my first week to make sure I had all my mental faculties intact: I refused to speak or make eye contact with anyone. This resulted in me being allowed to skip kindergarten, as they discovered I could already read and write on a level many years beyond my peers.

    Ridiculous. This threw me into a population of kids accustomed to schooling, who had already spent several years together through preschool and kindergarten. I withdrew further. Teachers universally clucked over my inability to talk. I was docked points for not participating enough in class. “She always knows the answer,” a kinder teacher informed my father (while I eavesdropped from the hallway). “She just won’t raise her hand.”

    The next day I raised my hand, just to prove her wrong. I incorrectly guessed the country Columbus sailed for and the kid behind me snorted. I don’t think I voluntarily raised my hand again for years.

    I was assigned to Math League, where you were given complex math problems to figure out silently and hand in on folded paper. I got nearly all of those right; I still remember and am pissed off about the ones I got wrong. I also did It’s Academic, a sort of team Jeopardy. I didn’t answer a single question the first 3 of 5 matches, even though I knew most of the answers. I couldn’t bring myself to push the buzzer.

    The education system fails the introverted child. I don’t resent any of my teachers or my schooling, at all. If anything it brought me out of my shell as much as was probably possible. But the way schooling is structured is no good for kids who live in their own head. It caused me so much pain because I wasn’t performing the way I knew I was supposed to.

    In junior high my father decided enough was enough and enrolled me in a Dale Carnegie class at the local tech college. With adults. There I was forced to learn the art of public speaking, and to this day, I am perfectly comfortable behind a podium or a microphone. The larger the audience, the more I grandstand and I assume the more arrogant I seem.

    But walking into a holiday party where I know most of the attendees? Still makes me feel wretched, and small.

    I’ve learned to ‘fake it until I make it,’ a sort of introverted survival tactic. Going to my best friend’s wedding reception— again, where I will know many of the people in attendance— was a terrifying experience. My way around it was to dress as Holly Golightly (Audrey Hepburn’s character in Breakfast at Tiffany’s), right down to the cigarette holder, tiara and wide-eyed vanity.

    That’s right. Afraid of scrutiny, I went to a wedding reception in a ridiculous costume and spoke in movie-isms.

    I communicate for a living. I write, often very personal and painful things, for as audience of strangers and friends alike. But I cannot write a word when my husband or son sits beside me. I’m paralyzed. I very much prefer an empty house, or waiting until all its inhabitants are very firmly asleep. (I write this now, as the clock strikes midnight.)

    I am a community manager; I spend my days talking to hundreds of people I don’t know. I reach out. I banter. I talk talk talk talk talk. I hang out with a group of women that I consider friends every day in a virtual space. I try not to think about the day I have to meet them in a real, physical space. It makes me break out in a sweat.

    My husband thinks I am outgoing to the point of obnoxiousness. In reality, I can’t sleep the night before a parent-teacher conference. I’m too busy plotting out what I can say in every possible scenario. It’s like the script I had to follow as a telemarketer, selling theater subscriptions: a tab to flip to in response to every excuse not to buy. Only I write these scripts in my head in anticipation of 5 minute conversations.

    It bothers me. I feel like I am pretending, but I swear I’m not. Both of these people are fully me.

    For the Left to Write book club, I read Susan Cain’s Quiet: the Power of Introverts in a World that Can’t Stop Talking. And every chapter was a revelation: that many introverts adapt in an attempt to succeed in a world that caters to extroverts. That Guy Kawasaki and Pete Cashmore identify as introverts. That the internet is truly a different social space:

    Studies have shown that, indeed, introverts are more likely than extroverts to express intimate facts about themselves online that their family and friends would be surprised to read, to say that they can express the “real me” online, and to spend more time in online discussions. They welcome the chance to communicate digitally. The same person who would never raise his hand in a lecture hall of 200 people might blog to two thousand, or 2 million, without thinking twice. The same person who finds it difficult to introduce himself to strangers might establish a presence online and then extend these relationships to the real world.

    It’s a relief to know that I share a common experience with other socially inept people. It feels trite to say, but seriously, I thought there was something wrong with me, that I still reverted to that shy, tongue-tied self. While many writers and bloggers I know will readily admit to having been shy or introverted when younger, they don’t volunteer that they remain so in real life. I suspect that maybe some of them are, like me, and yet loudmouth social butterflies in their virtual existence, like me.

    The book is like that. Full of studies and tidbits that cause you to examine your own psyche, and personality. I want to know how an extrovert would experience it, as it definitely celebrates the introvert and champions allowing solitude, and quiet, so that these people can recharge properly and fully realize their problem-solving strengths and creative abilities. Does an extrovert identify with that? Is it a difference in degree or in kind?

    I also wonder what will happen to the next generation of introverts, in this age of hyper-connectedness. On the one hand, they will be allowed to express themselves behind the safety of their computer screen. On the other, solitude and quiet are commodities increasingly difficult to come by.

    I have about a billion more thoughts about this book swirling around in my head, so expect more posts to come, but for now let me say how I wish this research and book had been available when I was a kid.

    Ironically, it won’t help me out much. My own kids are all extroverts and my husband and I are quite bewildered as to how that happened. Know a good book about cultivating extroverts? 🙂

    Were you introverted or extroverted as a child, and did that change in adulthood?

    Are your kids the same?

    How did you feel your school experience supported your personality and level of sensitivity?

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    Are you an introvert or extrovert? Author Susan Cain explores how introverts can be powerful in a world where being an extrovert is highly valued. Join From Left to Write on January 19 as we discuss Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking by Susan Cain. We’ll also be chatting live with Susan Cain at 9PM Eastern on January 26. As a member of From Left to Write, I received a copy of the book. All opinions are my own.

  • Beginners’ Guide to Birding (The Big Year)

    Beginners’ Guide to Birding (The Big Year)

    birdwatching movie

     

    This post comes courtesy of the PR folks for The Big Year. I’m sharing because it’s good info, and also because I heart Steve Martin and Owen Wilson, while my children think Jack Black is the funniest man since whoever invented the whoopie cushion. We kinda can’t wait to see it.

    the big year

    Comedic Icons Steve Martin, Jack Black and Owen Wilson Star in the Hilarious Outdoor Adventure Coming to Blu-ray and DVD January 31!

    Was your New Year’s resolution a pact to yourself to get outdoors and make 2012 your Big Year? In this beginner’s guide we’ll direct you to where you can find online field guides, deals on binoculars, regional checklists and new birding buddies to go on trips with. Grab a notebook and start practicing your birdcalls and soon you will be having the biggest year ever!

    Steve Martin, Jack Black and Owen Wilson portray three men from very different walks of life, facing a mid-life crisis, a work-life crisis and a no-life crisis. In the biggest competition of their lives, they undertake an unforgettable trek through North America, engaging in hilarious and bizarre adventures and forming friendships that will last a lifetime!

    Online Field Guides

    field guide birdsMany hardcore birders like to have physical field guides that they can take with them, and many people employ the use of regional field guides, as they offer more specific advice. As you are starting your birding adventure, try using a site like www.whatbird.com, which allows you to search for species in many different ways (including by region and by appearance). What Bird also has handy apps for e-readers and smart phones, which allow you to access their immense database on the go!

    Binoculars

    birdwatching binocularsIf you want to get serious about birding, you need a proper pair of binoculars. When you’re searching for your first pair, you need to pay attention to seven things: magnification, objective lens size, close focus, field of view, roof vs. porro prism, eye relief, and the 3 Ws (weight, waterproof and warranty). Go to store.onlinenaturemall.com for help choosing the type of binoculars that are right for you, as well as suggestions on where to buy them for the best price.

    Regional Checklists

    blue birdThe best way to start birding is to observe (and learn to recognize) the birds in your own backyard! To do this, you should consult a checklist of the birds that appear in your region. One of the best sites to visit when looking for information on species in your region is www.wildbirds.com. Wild Birds has each state in a United States (as well as most of Canada) represented on their site, with comprehensive checklists, reading lists and relevant links included.

    Birding Buddies

    the big yearThe best way to find a buddy to bird with is to join different groups for birding enthusiasts. Two of the largest birding organizations in the United States are the American Birding Association and the National Audubon Society. Each of these larger, national organizations can steer you towards either region-specific sectors of their organization, or smaller birding clubs in your area. You could also use www.Meetup.com to find birders in your area, and local events or trips to take part in.

     

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    Disclosure: No compensation was received for this post, just thought it was clever. A little more about the movie on Family Fun Delaware.