2007-03-31
I'm taking four days off (yesterday and next Monday thru Wednesday) from my job at Hotel California, just to rest up and maybe do the Passover thing.
(BTW, Hotel California isn't a hotel. I just call it that because when I first started working there they warned me that I'd better not even think about quitting. So, I can never leave.)
I'll save the irritating and genuinely bizarre office politics of HoCal for another post. Anyway, it's a job, and it pays ... if not exactly well, at least something. And it's work that fits in well with the rest of what's on my resume.
Anyway, the rest was much needed. I think a lot of background anxiety was coming from, or being aggravated by, fatigue.
Oh! And! I'm dating regularly. So lots of good things are happening.
(BTW, Hotel California isn't a hotel. I just call it that because when I first started working there they warned me that I'd better not even think about quitting. So, I can never leave.)
I'll save the irritating and genuinely bizarre office politics of HoCal for another post. Anyway, it's a job, and it pays ... if not exactly well, at least something. And it's work that fits in well with the rest of what's on my resume.
Anyway, the rest was much needed. I think a lot of background anxiety was coming from, or being aggravated by, fatigue.
Oh! And! I'm dating regularly. So lots of good things are happening.
Equation B Revisited
2007-03-31 10:24From the current Psychology Today, p. 16:
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http://asher63.livejournal.com/120068.html
People who live in sprawling neighborhoods have more friends and social interactions than city dwellers, economists at UC Irvine found. The ability to pick and choose social interactions rather than be forced into them may be one reason.
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http://asher63.livejournal.com/120068.html