I noticed a small dent in my car door this morning. No idea who the perpetrator was, but the giant SUV that parks next to me is always positioned at an angle that makes it difficult for me to get out. I'm going to leave a note on their windshield and let some parking space drama unfold. Regardless of whether or not they caused the dent, it's really annoying how I always have to squeeze in and out of my car like a circus performer.
This is a pretty interesting article. It discusses how people often become too preoccupied with finding a job that they love, and argues that finding a job you simply like can be more than sufficient towards personal well-being. I don't agree with all of its points (I think having high expectations, even if they're not always met, is generally a good thing), but I like how it presents a logical, balanced take on happiness and how a career doesn't have to be the focal point for achieving that. I often get asked the question, "do you see yourself staying at Blizzard?" My response can be likened to that of a politician - I'll go on some roundabout discourse about how much I like and respect the company and its products without actually answering yes or no to the question itself. The truth is that I don't really know. There are days where I feel like I have the best job ever, and there are days where I spend a lot of my time staring at spreadsheets. Ultimately, I do know that I like my job a lot (the pros far outweigh the cons), but I think I stop short of answering "yes" to that question due to some fear of "locking myself in" and eliminating any mystery or ambiguity from my future. Some of the best things in my life have occurred as a result of a sort of carefree spontaneity and I think I get scared of a life without the potential for that.
Do you remember your first ever exposure to music? Mine is a tossup between either 1) my mom playing on an old electone we had at home or 2) The Carpenters. I've always had this strange vision of my mom playing the electric organ in a smoky tavern nestled deep in the mountains. I could've sworn that she told me a story of how she once did that, but I think this is probably one of those childhood memories that could just as likely have been a dream. I guess I'll never know; I could ask her, but I think I prefer to keep it a mystery.
30 Rock is my newest TV addiction. Find me something funnier, I dare you.
Listening to: The Carpenters - Superstar
Reading: A Tragic Legacy