Showing posts with label About Me. Show all posts
Showing posts with label About Me. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 30, 2020

grad school


So, I applied and got into a masters program at Georgia Tech and I start in August.

I had to take the GRE for the application process, so I had been studying since last fall.
I was nervous for this because I haven't taken a test in like 14 years.
And then it got delayed because of the pandemic.
But I took it and was happy with how I did.

Then I was nervous about getting accepted because I've taken almost a decade off of work outside of the home.
But I got in.

Now I'm nervous for it to start because I haven't ever done school with kids. And I haven't taken classes in so long.
And instead of having alone time for the first time this fall to do classwork (Edison was going to start preschool and the other three would be in all day school), I'll probably have all four at home all the time and I'll be directing their learning as well as mine.
But it will all work out, and I'm excited to do the University thing again.



Wednesday, January 11, 2017

third trimester



There are many things about social interactions that I'm not super good at and don't enjoy.
The third trimester of pregnancy normally brings me to an elevated introvert level.
This time around though I've felt gigantic from the start, and even though I'm at 34 weeks I feel like I'm 40 weeks, so I'm at a whole new level of not wanting to be around people. 
Honestly I wouldn't leave the house ever and I'd be happy with it.

But, there are things that need to be done.
Man, am I ever crabby when I have to do people stuff (in my head, mostly... I hope).
It usually seems like no one can talk to you about anything else except your obvious 'great with child' state. And I can usually find something eye roll inducing in the conversation. 

I've had a couple really nice interactions lately though.
Bless those people that can act normal and make me feel not like an elephant or a baby-erupting time bomb.

Disclaimer: this is kind of whiny and I totally realize it. I'm not really wanting any 'oh, you look great' comments. I think I just need to record how uncomfortable I feel somewhere for reference so when I feel it again I can tell myself it's totally normal, the brain just forgets it, and that this too shall pass.

me at about 33 weeks

6 weeks to go (hopefully less, mom gets here on February 11th and I'd be super happy to have this baby anytime after).



 



Thursday, November 10, 2016

disillusioned



Let me start with some stories from my life.
This is long, but is close to my heart and has me vulnerable and raw.

I have always been lucky that school came easy for me. But I have also always had a sense of satisfaction in work and the desire to excel and not disappoint anyone (parents and teachers) so I put in huge effort too. So I learned a lot and grew in competence, enough that I was confident in any situation I found myself or pursued, even if that course was challenging or scary.

  I got into the university of my choice and through some of the more intense intellectual challenges of my life applied, was accepted into, and made it through the hard weed out classes of the electrical engineering program, the profession I had envisioned for myself from about age 17... all while working long hours to pay for school so I wouldn't have any debt.
But then I realized I wanted to go a different direction.
I wanted to change to be a construction manager.

So I met with the program's advisor, found I was abundantly qualified academically, but that the program required valuable applicable work experience to be admitted.
'No problem', I thought, 'I'll just get a summer job with a construction company'.
And so I tried.
Crickets. No response. Stonewalled.
Now this wasn't supposed to be hard experience to get. Older, already-in-the-industry me knows that construction laborers that meet the basic criteria of showing up regularly and actually doing work are hard to find. And I think this was in summer of 2004, fully in the swing of the crazy construction boom that had taken hold of the nation.
I finally was able to work with a small small outfit of firefighters who finished basements on the side, but the guy only 'took me on' as a favor to my mom (his friend) and it was for no pay.
Young me knew this was unfair, but I also knew I could change minds as far as my worth.
And I did. Within a day or two every single person there commented about how quickly I picked things up and how they were using me as a full member of their crew. But they still didn't pay me.
To my knowledge, no male member of the program had to accept no pay to get experience.

I got the experience needed, also working at a full time job that summer for, you know, money to pay for life and school. Got into the program. Worked hard. Excelled. Exhibited enough skill that one of the professors asked me to be a teaching assistant for one of the core classes. Completed a good summer internship (I'm skipping sharing similar difficulty in obtaining and working in this internship for the sake of brevity, but suffice it to say coworkers expressed surprise that a girl could do such competent work). Competed for the university on a national level. By any measure I can think of built a great set of skills and a great resume.

 Skip ahead to trying to find a job for after graduation.
Keep in mind that this is 2006, absolute height of the housing boom, the employment rate for the construction management program I was in was pretty much 100%, and I was a good student.
Crickets. No response. Stonewalled.
I would go into interviews and see immediate visible dismissal, I honestly think that I got a couple interviews by their mistake, that they read my name "Camren" instead of  Carmen and thought I was a guy.
Standard practice for women is to wear professional clothes and makeup to interviews, but by the end of this process I was totally minimizing makeup and slicking my hair back tight in a pony tail to minimize femininity because I found I was treated better.
I will forever love and be thankful for the company that finally did 'take a chance on me' {sarcasm in saying that phrase, not in the love I do feel for that company}.

I learned a lot and I know I made some valuable contributions, including exposing someone who had been consistently cheating the company, getting them fired, and picking up the additional work load to finish the project he had been assigned to. 
My bonus that year reflected the good job I had done, but some of the comments made in my year end review galled me, chilled me and will always be burned into my brain.
Owner of the company: 'I didn't think a woman could do this job', 'I was hesitant to let them hire you, but I'm glad we did', and completely out of the blue 'hey, we want you to know that if you are thinking of starting a family, we would miss you but we would totally understand'.

I want to leave you with that for a minute to absorb the inappropriateness.
This wasn't some backwater hick. He has a degree from an ivy league school. 
This was from a good person and a good company that actually hired me. What were the internal attitudes of those who dismissed my resume or dismissed me in an interview, whether or not those attitudes were acknowledged to their conscious thoughts? 

And on and on it goes. I'm getting tired of this, so I won't get into details about the job hardships I encountered when moving to Michigan for Curt's MBA. I'll summarize by saying that a small portion of it can be explained by the fact that Michigan has been in a decades long recession, but the base truth is that I was underemployed and underpaid primarily because of my gender.

Which brings me to my topic today.

This year an extremely intelligent, qualified, skilled, and educated woman with a very strong resume applied for a job. She was compared to a man who was severely less qualified in every way and the man was given the job.

To make it worse, the man did not try to hide his incompetence. He flaunted it and rejected the opportunity to gain education and knowledge about the job he was applying for during the very long evaluation process, showing up to interviews unprepared and spewing insults. He was disrespectful, arrogant, petty, and juvenile in his attitude. He was dismissive about women, treating them as something for his visual consumption and enjoyment or good for nothing. He lied big, obvious lies with the assumption that saying them loud enough and often enough would make them self evident truths. He promoted fear and anger and disgust for different thoughts. 


I'll tell you the worst part though.
It's not that he was reaching for the job, arrogant and narcissistic people frequently think they deserve power.

It's that those who hired him were my country.
They were the people in the beautiful state I live in.
They were my beloved home state that I want to live in again someday.
They were my guy friends that sincerely believe women don't get treated like this often because they personally aren't on the receiving end.
Or are among those who dish it out but don't think of themselves as sexist because it's hard to recognize within oneself.
They were my women friends who are not really in the workforce.**
Or my women friends who went into the few fields that are deemed 'acceptable' for women. 
They were the people I go to church with.
They were my extended family.
They were my close family.

And while I believe that most of the people I listed would never knowingly do anything to hold me back, they don't really care or think about this problem and so are complicit to my being treated and sometimes mistreated as a 'woman' instead of being allowed to be evaluated as an individual.

People will say, 'no, it wasn't because she was a woman, it was because of ...'.
But, given the experiences I shared and many others I have seen, I believe she was vilified so intensely in part because she was a woman working in the upper levels of politics, where women just don't go without being brutalized. Given how close it came, whatever the level of sexism, it was enough to be the deciding factor in the election.
And I feel bad for her.
Even though I don't agree on a lot of her plan, at least she had developed a plan.
Even if I didn't like some of her answers, she could at least answer coherently and in depth.
And the job was given to a man being obtuse.

And so I am bone tired sad. I'm sad enough that I'm brought to tears, and not many things do that to me. I'm sad that we've taken a huge visible step backwards and that I feel it likely my daughter will face much the same situation I have and not a better one. I hate that I will have to fight harder to keep the insidious tentacles of this nasty treatment of women out of my sons. I hate that so many people of this country now feel justified and emboldened in bad behavior. I'm shocked by the ferocity of my feelings, betrayal and hurt, and to be honest it's probably because in my heart of hearts I didn't really think it would come to this.

His speech accepting the job was ever so slightly consoling.
At least the hatred and fear mongering were conspicuously absent.
But that is such a low bar and the actual substance of the speech was so small.

I'll end on the acknowledgement that the things I feel probably don't even compare to the punch in the gut my friends who have been sexually assaulted feel, or my friends who have immigrated here, or whose parents immigrated here, or who are a different color than white.

P.S. I wrote this yesterday in the midst of grappling with the results of the election.
While I still feel that the things I wrote here are true, this morning I feel them at a lower intensity. Yesterday was also spent doing things that introverts do to deal with things, I read everything I could find...other people's personal experiences and feelings, news stories analyzing things, 'experts' from both ends of the political spectrum weighing in on anything and everything. (This was probably one of the better things I read) And I feel a little better. No more tears. I hope good things for the future. And I feel better about those I love that may have voted for Trump. Just because they voted for someone vile doesn't mean that they don't also think he's vile.

**all of these groupings are generalizations, I know there are many exceptions in each. Heck, I'm an exception in this particular one...I prioritize staying at home higher than having a career but I sincerely wish I could split in two and both kick butt in the work place and personally be here for these most beloved babies, I love working.

 




Wednesday, July 27, 2016

a note to feel more authentic



I feel like this space has kind of become a travelogue. 
And it has. We are blessed to be able to travel a whole lot.
But I want it also out there that my everyday life is perfect for me but fairly un-post worthy.
We hang out in the constant toy explosion play room and play, do art, and I sometimes do family history while all that is going on.

This space is missing some of my thoughts though.
Things that are super important to me.
We have goals, BIG goals, that we are constantly working towards.
Without mentioning these I feel superficial.

I want to have no debt.
We have no debt by some people's standards, but we still have a mortgage.
I don't want that.
Our mortgage is currently half of what we could sell our house for, and I play with a chart monthly to see how much extra we can pay and how it affects the payoff date.
Our current projected payoff date is June of 2022.
Working to make it sooner.

I want Curt to be able to retire early if he wants to.
On our brokerage firm's website they have a retirement calculator/check how you're doing.
Right now we're on track for a retirement at age 50 with some conservative assumptions to ensure we're ok.
(Assumptions: we live a long time after retiring, Curt's income doesn't go up in the intervening years, etc)

But life is a give and take, and while Curt has worked hard and smart to get to make sure that he has a good income to provide for our family, I want to acknowledge some of the things we don't do to enable the stuff we want to do.
-We had a year or so of intense frugality-
when we lived in Michigan and before we had kids we made it a game to see how little we could live on. this catapulted us ahead, way ahead, paying for Curt's MBA with no student loans ahead, and made our current life possible. 
-Our kids don't do stuff-
dance, gymnastics, extracurricular activities of any sort
we'll obviously revisit this if any of our kids express interest and a willingness to work for stuff as they get older, but for now this works and they're learning good things at home
-We don't eat out much-
Curt makes his lunch to bring to work most days, unless there's a specific reason not to. 
We used to really not eat out, like for all of 2009 we spent about $300 eating out, including all trips and even little things like McDonalds.
Currently we pick up something about once a week.
-We don't spend money on entertainment-
we don't go to the movies, we don't do theme parks, we generally don't do college or professional sports games.
-I didn't get a smartphone until 2014-
I waited until we could get a plan comparable in price to my non-smartphone plan and until our net worth was a few hundred thousand dollars.
-I don't spend much on clothes or other personal maintenance-
I love consignment shops for kids clothes, and even there I usually buy on the half off sales
I've never personally paid to get a haircut or dye, I've never gotten my nails done, or any other of the million different hygiene treatments I know exist.

I want to say here that spending money on any of these things is not bad, it's just bad if it is at the expense of your future goals. 
Each family is in charge of their own trajectory and priorities.

Some splurges we still make room for:
-we have a monthly book budget
-we have several charities that we love and give to
-obviously travel
But I do want to note that when we travel we don't spend willy nilly.
We use airbnb or points for our accommodations (or we stay with family), we generally choose free things like the Smithsonian museums and walking around to get a feel for a place over paying for attractions, although we will pay for an attraction if we've researched it and deem it worth it. We use public transportation over taxis. We grocery shop and do many meals at 'home' rather than eating out.


"The reason we struggle with insecurity is because we compare our behind-the-scenes with everyone else’s highlight reel." -Steve Furtick
 
I'm not sure exactly why I felt compelled to share all this, but it might have something to do with the quote above. By and large I share the fun highlights of life on my blog, I do that on purpose and I don't really feel bad about it. But I also don't want to contribute to false notions that anyone can have it all and have it all right now.


 
 



Wednesday, May 25, 2016

right now...

Curt:
-got a promotion and is really enjoying the new department he's working with
-reads and mows the lawn and is the fun parent

{went up to Curt's work to have lunch at a nearby park one day back in April}

Carmen:
-just got called as the Primary President at church. (For those unfamiliar with Mormon lingo, our church is run by members, we each get jobs called callings that usually last a couple years. The Primary is the children's organization, we have almost 90 kids in our ward.) 
It's a little bit daunting, but it will be good.
-thought I was done with house projects, but have concluded that it's just a way of life for me.
I will find new projects always.
Doing now: piano room, powder room, starting to mess with the yard.


{we've had several bonfires to clear out yard stuff}

Des:
-finished up pre-k and will be starting kindergarten in the Fall, he's so ready
-doing swimming lessons
-is in the 97th percentile for height.
Where the heck that came from I don't know, Curt and I are both short.
He gets mistaken for being several years older than he is all the time.

-We're reading the Nancy Drew books for bedtime stories, he loves it.


Evie:
-is finally potty trained. I'm such a weeny at this, but the good part of waiting so long is that they have good control. No messes and a short transition time.
-loves to bug her older brother and can reliably evoke crazy rage reactions, ugh.
-is super strong willed.
I'm trying to not beat this trait out of my kids because I think it will get them places in life, but man oh man it's sometimes like riding a bucking bronco.


McKay:
-is cutting his final tooth that he has room in his mouth for, all four eye teeth just came in at once
-runs and jumps and dances and climbs, has a melt-your-heart smile
-is getting quite the simple phrase vocabulary
things I can think of off hand: catch, don't, button (as in belly button), see, ear, ut-oh, mine, let go, down, bite, mama, daddy, there you go, phone, oh there it is, got it
-can understand most things said to him and answers yes/no questions (yes is usually emphatic nodding)
-is a lot more petite than Des was at this age and has really good fine motor skills
-I'm thinking his eyes might actually stay blue?
(all the kids have started blue, Des' turned greenish, Evie's now have streaks the color of her hair, pretty neat and unusual)





{just applied for this little guy's passport, he's so cute}



{I've been making this a lot for dinner, simple and yummy}





Monday, March 7, 2016

Health



As a family we've just emerged from a couple month period of health challenges.
Makes me extremely thankful that our 'normal' does not involve ongoing health issues.

We each took a turn with a particularly nasty flu bug (Des landed in the hospital from it), and a cold/respiratory thing infected a few of us also.


So, we hunkered down and became even more reclusive than my already reclusive tendancies. 

There was an additional health thing that I go back and forth on whether I want to share, but will because a) it's significant to my life, I want a record of it, and it would feel inauthentic not to; b) it's a topic not talked about a lot and I think it should be; and c) I've worked through it so putting it on here isn't painful.

I was pregnant with twins (identical!) and miscarried.
I knew it was going to happen a few weeks before it did...we had an ultrasound to help establish a due date and found two babies in the same amniotic sac, but no heartbeats.
I'm thankful that it happened that way so I could process it in my head before I had to process the physical part of it.
Speaking of the physical part of it, that was way worse than I expected.
I wonder why that is? In the past when contemplating the concept of miscarriage my mind always categorized it as a mental trauma (which it is)...the loss of a child. But the physical trauma is there too.

At any rate, Hooray for Spring and new beginnings!

 {coming in for a Salt Lake City landing}
Curt had me take a one day solo trip during all this to see some family
so soothing to my soul
such a good husband




Monday, August 24, 2015

right now...



Curt:
-about the same as last time
 
 

Carmen:
-changed callings at church, am now in the Primary presidency
-the house projects were completed as recorded here 
(yet since then I have repainted the master bath a light gray and we have rearranged the bedrooms such that Evie has her own room)
-I've been working on some family history and have been able to find some missing ancestors of Curt's. Surprisingly addicting. If you haven't explored familysearch.org, I would recommend it. 



Des:
 -starts school (pre-k) tomorrow and is so excited
-is as loud and intense as ever, but has become more helpful and in control.
 
 

Evie:
-is continuing to speak clearer and is not using many of her baby words any longer (like orange-er-ie for orange)
-is mostly even tempered, but if she does get going can sure turn on the water works
 -loves 'twirly' dresses and oatmeal
 

McKay:
-has been having lots of milestones. Got his two top teeth, has been standing by himself, and then three days ago took a couple steps on his own.
-doesn't sleep really well. I need to work on that. 
-has been imitating some word sounds
-gets into everything with his funny fast bug crawl
 
 
 
 As a family we've been spending some awesome time at the neighborhood pool, kind of regret not going more last year.






Saturday, March 7, 2015

right now...



Curt:
-is still plugging away at work and as the ward cubmaster, organist, and music chair

{photo by Des}

Carmen:
-still doing cub scouts. We just had our Blue and Gold banquet, glad that's done.



-working on putting our house back together (still from the remodel and then additionally the leak)

you can see a picture from my last check in here, and then here's one of right now:

we've had carpet replaced, drywall installed (and then repaired), hardwood floors refinished
we've tiled one bathroom, installed a bunch of trim, painted the kitchen ceiling
we're in the middle of doing bathroom counter tops and caulking for paint
still need to paint. oh so much paint. and work on the last bathroom.
there is a light at the end of the tunnel.

Des:
 -turned four while we didn't have access to the kitchen (refinishing the floors), so had a really low-key celebration upstairs
-is sounding out and reading small words (bob books) and loves to draw and paint
-is filled with intense (and loud) emotion, whether happy, sad, mad, or anything else









Evie:
-is pretty easy going, especially for a two year old
-must do whatever her older brother is doing
-now shares a room with Des at night
-is talking clearer and in complete sentences



I'm pretty darn excited for the sibling friendship that is developing.

McKay:
-is a happy dude
-rolls all over the place
-just cut his two bottom teeth (crazy, he's barely 4 months old)
-is messing with my sleep, probably has something to do with the teeth





 




Friday, October 17, 2014

right now...



Curt:
-is in the midst of finishing a busy time at work.
Good thing that's going to be winding down a bit as we'll soon have a newborn again. 
-has already met his reading goal for the year so he increased the number of books in the goal



Carmen:
-is at 38 1/2 weeks of this pregnancy.
This new baby boy can make his arrival at any time now, but I'm actually hoping to go a couple days past my due date.  It'd be much more convenient to have mom already here when I go into labor.
-is working on a pretty large home project I've labeled the 'bonus room reconfiguration'.

 Here's a picture from about 2 minutes ago...

Des:
-loves to boss Evie around.
She's generally amenable to it, but when she's not it usually ends up with Des yelling/tantruming and being put in his room.
-loves to sing. or yell/sing. or just be loud in general.




Evie:
-is incessantly covered in marker.
-wants to pick out her own outfits
-loves to dance. She has some pretty hilarious moves.








Monday, June 30, 2014

right now...

Curt:
-is starting his second rotation at work
-is running even more. 
He was preparing for a half marathon that we were going to Michigan for him to do it with friends, but they cancelled that race.


Carmen:
-at week 23 of this pregnancy, second trimester is always so awesome for me
-still working on home projects. 
Patching the ceiling downstairs from getting can lights put in, about to pull the trigger on replacing the roof, and we just replaced a toilet and supply line valve downstairs that had developed a leak.




Des:
-is potty training.
Which is huge. We've tried off and on for months with dismal results (this kid has some serious stubbornness), but this weekend we finally rounded a corner. Today is day/night 3 of no diapers.
-loves doing his 'school stuff', which is a large kindergarten booklet I picked up at Sam's Club.

 


oh, those curls and that color, love

Evie:
-has a rapidly expanding vocabulary. 
new words everyday. real talking feels somewhat imminent.
-is extremely affectionate.
very generous with hugs and kisses to us (and toys), and has figured out that kisses are closed mouthed and makes the *mwah* sound


Tuesday, May 20, 2014

right now...




Curt:
-is finishing up a big project at work...a week and a half left! {we're excited}
-at church is now the cubmaster in addition to all of his music callings
-is running a bunch again. 
What made the difference is joining the gym at his work, even though we have a gym in both our home and neighborhood clubhouse. It just works better {and thus happens} at lunch time.


Carmen:
-I'm still getting back into an 'at home' routine after being in Utah for a month
-as always, working on home projects. 
Current docket: still working on painting all the trim I added in the foyer, need to patch the ceiling downstairs from getting can lights put in, getting bids for replacing the roof



Des:
-is sooo loud. 
I find myself saying some variation of 'don't shout' or 'don't yell' approximately a million times a day.
-is getting along so much better with Evie.
Don't get me wrong, he still doesn't like her some of the time, but the ratio is improving.
-is getting to the point that he's actually helpful...not just the intent, but he can follow directions and do things that make my life easier.
-is very articulate. talks up a storm. has a large vocabulary and comprehension.


 Evie:
-is running or climbing everywhere.
-is quiet as she gets into everything.
-is so sweet and happy, but also opinionated and persistant
-has added a few words to the list from last time: hi, hello, bye, bite {begging for food}
-even though she doesn't talk a lot, her understanding has increased dramatically.
I can give her instructions like "go find your shoes" and she'll go and bring them to me. She also nods or shakes her head and uses them to answer yes or no questions.

{after Evie climbed to the top bunk by herself (mind you, there's no ladder)...the bunk beds were promptly taken apart and they are now serving as two twin beds}

{by the way, I got these beds plus the matching dresser on Craigslist for $200, score!, then I painted them black}

Monday, January 20, 2014

getting smart


So, this is the year.
The year I join the 21st century.
By getting a smart phone.

That's right.
After all of my adult siblings, all my in-laws, my dad, my mom, and even my grandpa.

I got the iphone.
The price was right {free} with the contract renewal.
Biggest selling point: camera in my pocket.
Sometimes I just don't have {or want to lug around} my big camera.

Anyways...
Today was Martin Luther King Day and we got to keep Curt home with us. Love that.
I raked all the pine needles off of the back lawn and it was so beautiful out {almost 70} that we got dinner and had a picnic.
And yes, the kids were in pajamas. And yes, Evie sure rocks the bedhead.






trying lemonade. she liked it.


all photos taken with my new nifty device.
recording moments that otherwise would not be recorded.
not sorry I waited, but oh so glad to now have.


where you readers come from