OMG, as David would say - I'm posting a new blog! Yes, sorry, you're right, my bad, blah, blah, blah. Moving on.
I just finished my first solo week at work. No Sarah. She and her husband are, I'm guessing, well into their drive north, to their new home and new lives in Portland, Oregon. They will start a new chapter in their lives. I've only known her for 2 months, but even I knew - it was time.
So now, I'm all alone in my job at MTD. And I felt a bit like a deer in the headlights, this week. I know, I know - Sarah and I worked together for two whole months, I should've learned it all in that time, right? The whole job, no questions or fears, right?
Wrong.
From the first day I met her, I had an inkling about what would happen - we'd have so much fun giggling, gossiping and getting to know each other, that the "learning the job" thing would, umm, sort of fall by the wayside. Turns out, I was right.
Oh, sure - I learned the basics, and as everyone in a new job should, I'll put my own stamp on the job. But these next few weeks are going to a bit of "hurry and catch up," to learn all the details.
And honestly, I don't think I'd want it any other way, would you?
Sarah's last day at MTD was, I hope, memorable for her. I planned it to be, so I hope it worked. I sent out an email invite to the staff, before 8am that day: "Join me in the kitchen, for Sarah's Going Away Breakfast! Just the first stop of the day on the Sarah Farewell Tour (just like Cher!)."
So, bagels, fruit and coffee for Stop 1; Lunch at Mulligan's for Stop 2. A driver brought in a cake (!) for her, so "dessert" became Stop 3. (I have a photo of Stop 2...on my work computer. Will add it later.)
Stop 4 was Happy Hour at The Sand Bar. See? Here's proof - Martha, Sarah and me:
I invited everyone to Stop 5 on the Farewell Tour - Jazzercise on the following Monday. Oddly - no takers, except me. Well, I had a great time, anyway! Might just make this Jazzercise thing a real part of my life. No promises, of course - only if I can find some really cute jazzer-togs.
And yes, thanks for asking, there was a Stop 6 on the Farewell Tour - Sarah and I met to share a bottle of wine, on Stearns Wharf. Why the Wharf? Because it has one of the most stunning views of Santa Barbara - the ocean, the beach, the mountain, the Riviera. Sarah was - and is - keen to move on with her life, excited about what her new Oregon life will bring. But one last look at Santa Barbara, her second home, from such a gorgeous vantage point...who could blame her?
I'll miss her, but as it turns out, I did learn a lot from her:
*Keep that smile on your face;
*Wear heels whenever possible;
*Greet everyone you meet as if they already like you and treat them nicely;
and last but not least:
*Bitchiness be damned, rock that ponytail!
Miss you, Mrs. Herbold. Wish you well...but really miss you.
Farewell Tour Stop #7, from K8 in Paradise.
Sunday, June 28, 2009
Sunday, October 12, 2008
A Day on the Radio
Greetings from sunny Santa Barbara!
I just got off the phone with Gigi, at WKUF, a small radio station at Kettering University, in Flint, MI.
I contacted Gigi to get my client on her show: Lunch Poems with Gigi. She and I also hit it off, so she invited me to be on her show, too - a show of my own! The hard part - she asked me to think of my favorite poet, so we could discuss that person and his/her poems.
Favorite poet? Me?!? I'm sort of a haiku girl, really. But I gave it some thought, and suddenly I knew - Sylvia Plath is my favorite poet. Or at least a poet I know a little bit about.
In college at Indiana Central University, I had an amazing professor, Dr. Michael Allen. I took a couple of his classes, and really, those are the ones I remember the most - a Great American Novel class, and maybe something along the lines of Short Stories, or something. One class included a section on American poets. And Sylvia Plath was one of them.
He did a wonderful job of showing us poems, deconstructing them, explaining, line by line, what the poet was saying. "Daddy" by Plath is one I remember the most - so amazing, so moving, such great images and wordcraft.
Gigi didn't know a lot about Plath, but she plunged into her journals and poems, to prep for our one hour show. And what a show! Gigi played an audio we'd found on Youtube, of Plath reading "Daddy." Hearing that poem, in Plath's voice - haunting.
The hour flew by, and included me reading another poem that caught my eye as I thumbed through my new Plath collection: "Ode to Ted." It is a love poem to her new husband, Ted Hughes. Honestly, I got a bit choked up after reading it on the show. Ever the trooper, I gulped past my tears and continued the discussion.
It was fun, I had a great time. I don't think I'll be able to get a copy, but if I do, well, I'll share it, if I can.
Today I'm heading to Borders Goleta, to see my pal Wayne, and attend the event of my pal, Kathryn Cushman - she'll be discussing and signing her new novel. Looking foward to it!
Enjoy your Sunday - K8.
I just got off the phone with Gigi, at WKUF, a small radio station at Kettering University, in Flint, MI.
I contacted Gigi to get my client on her show: Lunch Poems with Gigi. She and I also hit it off, so she invited me to be on her show, too - a show of my own! The hard part - she asked me to think of my favorite poet, so we could discuss that person and his/her poems.
Favorite poet? Me?!? I'm sort of a haiku girl, really. But I gave it some thought, and suddenly I knew - Sylvia Plath is my favorite poet. Or at least a poet I know a little bit about.
In college at Indiana Central University, I had an amazing professor, Dr. Michael Allen. I took a couple of his classes, and really, those are the ones I remember the most - a Great American Novel class, and maybe something along the lines of Short Stories, or something. One class included a section on American poets. And Sylvia Plath was one of them.
He did a wonderful job of showing us poems, deconstructing them, explaining, line by line, what the poet was saying. "Daddy" by Plath is one I remember the most - so amazing, so moving, such great images and wordcraft.
Gigi didn't know a lot about Plath, but she plunged into her journals and poems, to prep for our one hour show. And what a show! Gigi played an audio we'd found on Youtube, of Plath reading "Daddy." Hearing that poem, in Plath's voice - haunting.
The hour flew by, and included me reading another poem that caught my eye as I thumbed through my new Plath collection: "Ode to Ted." It is a love poem to her new husband, Ted Hughes. Honestly, I got a bit choked up after reading it on the show. Ever the trooper, I gulped past my tears and continued the discussion.
It was fun, I had a great time. I don't think I'll be able to get a copy, but if I do, well, I'll share it, if I can.
Today I'm heading to Borders Goleta, to see my pal Wayne, and attend the event of my pal, Kathryn Cushman - she'll be discussing and signing her new novel. Looking foward to it!
Enjoy your Sunday - K8.
Sunday, October 5, 2008
Kate Writes a Blog
Greetings from my Kate-Blog! I'm very happy to be blogging, to force myself to actually write on a regular basis, to communicate with friends and family in this unique way, and mostly to join the 21st century!
Catchy name needed...
Blog o' Kate?
Kate-ster's Blog
Kate's Bloggy?
Blog-O- Rama?
Whatever. I think I'll figure something out later. For now, let's just blog away!
Catchy name needed...
Blog o' Kate?
Kate-ster's Blog
Kate's Bloggy?
Blog-O- Rama?
Whatever. I think I'll figure something out later. For now, let's just blog away!
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