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Game hiatus: anecdotes from the real life


On 06/12/2015 at 11:00 PM by Machocruz

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I figured since my gaming career is on hiatus until Metal Gear Solid V comes out (it would be Batman, but I still only have outdated PC and PS3), I'd take this time to shed some light on other areas of my life, like some of the other bloggers around here.

The sort of big news is my financial situation has upgraded a bit. After much looking, I got a second job: working overnight stock for Sears ( I didn't say it was glamorous news). My usual freelance gig is sedentary and isolated, which has been slowly driving me stir crazy for the past several years, plus I'm experiencing some serious down time in business, so I figured I'd do something physical, social and get paid for it. I've worked overnight stock in the past, at Toys R Us during the Christmas rush. We did a lot of lifting and hauling, and long hours (Alot of 10-11 hours shifts, mostly by our own choice. Mo' money), but the time went by relatively quickly. Nice and peaceful during the night.  I guess you could say it was 'enjoyable.' Plus I was, ahem, popular with a couple of the ladies there, for some reason >:D  Anyway, I won't work nearly those amount of hours at Sears, at least not until Christmas.

This was after my sister put me onto a catering gig last week, which was a pleasant surprise. The struggle is real, but I'm feeling the momentum starting to kick in.  Seems like the law of attraction has some truth to it, as it seems one thing leads to another when you jump in feet first. Now if only I can find away to get my creative juices flowing again. My sister tells me I got compliments from the boss and some of the other staff, and they put me on their mailing list for future gigs. Once I get going, I put in that work. But  getting going is the hard part.

I'm on my way to completing my 7th month of volunteer service for the forest preserve district of my county.  With 42 hours of service under my belt, I'm eligible for training courses for specialized tasks like chainsaw operation, herbicide application, or brush fire setting. And to think that when I started back in December, that 30 hours felt so far away (30 is the minimum amount of hours to qualify). I've seen the forest preserves evolve from frozen wastelands to dense undergrowth and a wide array of plant and insect life. I may take on a third site/Saturday per month. Got to build the momentum.

The week of that catering job, I (re)started a workout program because I knew I would be standing a lot and I wanted my clothes to fit better.  I went up a pant size last year, which rendered some of them unwearable.  Just resistance exercise for now. More momentum building. Consistency is key.

Started reading  again. Started with Pet Semetary, which I got for 50 cents at a resale shop. Read it in three days. It aims to be proper literature, It's not about monsters eating people. I've rarely felt grief so palpably conveyed in writing. After that, The Iliad which I got at the same shop; currently in progress, as I'm finding I'm not in the mood for the ancient prose right now. Just finished reading Slaugherhouse Five, which I bought and finished on Wednesday.  The book is satirical, but heavy and somewhat sad at the same time. It's a fast read, as the author speaks plainly yet with personality.  There is a sadness to modern man, as if the collective hardships of all previous generation are on his shoulders. I don't get the sense that our distant ancestors felt that life was meaningless or were in a state of existential crisis.  This books suggests to me that the two world wars are at the root of this. Also read the original, unfilmed script for Day of the Dead.  George Romero said he planned on it being "the Gone With The Wind of zombie films." It was ok. Still wouldn't have matched Dawn of the Dead (1978), which is still THE zombie epic.

Basically, this is my 'recovering from depression' lifestyle now. I have to keep having goals to strive for, no matter now humble, unglamorous. I'm ignoring internet drama, which only made it worse. It's like all the malcontents and losers congregate on the 'net and form these little cliques where they blame the world for all their problems and claim that have the proper perspective of reality.  The only useful thing you can do is to work on bettering yourself and try to raise others up.  I tried the whole brooding thing, and while it makes you seem like some cool movie hero in your own mind, it's really not useful. It doesn't get you "paid and laid," so to speak. You're just wasting the months and years. Trust me, I've wasted them. Now I have to deal with the frustration that comes from realizing I've wasted a lot of my good years trying to self-medicate with entertainment, distractions, and fantasies.


 

Comments

Ranger1

06/13/2015 at 07:35 AM

I'm on my way out the door to work, so this is a placeholder comment until I get home.

Ranger1

06/14/2015 at 12:01 PM

Keeping active seems to be the key to battling depression for me. I started running last December and "ran" a snowshoe race series. I'm signed up for three trail races this summer, but I may have bitten off more than I can chew. I dunno, all I know is that I feel better now that I'm doing something physical.

I hear you about The Iliad. Which translation are you reading? I've got the Robert Fagles translation, which is a little less archaic than some. I think I need to dive into something mindless for a bit before I go back to my list of "Books I really ought to read", which includes Slaughterhouse Five and 1984.

Glad you're enjoying the outdoors volunteer stuff. All conservation/forestry departments would be screwed if it weren't for dedicated volunteers like yourself. We're usually the first areas that lose funding when budgets are tight and we frequently are asked to do more with less both financially as well as crew-wise.

Your remark about watching things evolve from frozen wastelands to dense undergrowth is pretty similar to what our Americorps/Maine Conservation Corps person said, too. She started in February, and was surprised to discover that there was a second parking lot, it was buried under three feet of snow until late March.

Machocruz

06/14/2015 at 03:34 PM

I think it's useful to bite off more than you can chew once in a while; I believe being "overwhelmed" like that can change your state, like a drug. I can just imagine the dread you are going to feel like as the third race approaches (depending how hard the first two are for you), but I think you'll feel renewed once it's in your rearview mirror.

I'm reading the Bantam Classics edition, translated by Alston Chase and William Perry Jr. With the extra spending money I'm getting, I may become a regular at my local bookstore. Want to start building relationships with people, as part of my "therapy." What's the frequency for becoming familiar to staff in a store? Once a week, twice?

Had to volunteer for something.  And I didn't want to teach children or the elderly. I'm a savage at heart, so the "wilds" became the obvious choice. Feel lucky that the service exists, but wished I had contemplated it earlier. Did you ever tell the story here how you got involved in your business?

Ranger1

06/14/2015 at 09:57 PM

About the races: I figure you never know unless you try. And even if I end up walking, I'll still finish. I'm not competing against anyone other than myself.

Bookstores: Once a week in smaller independants is usually plenty. My bookstore of choice in high school was a tiny independant run by a guy who just liked books. I think he was independantly wealthy, so it was more for the fun of it rather than worrying about making ends meet. Anyway, Ewing knew all his regulars and their reading tastes and would stash books under the counter for his favorites. I'd walk in, and he'd pull out a book and say "This came in last week. I think you'll really enjoy it." and he was never wrong.

As for how I got my start in parks... Pure dumb luck and the right place at the right time. I grew up three miles away from a state historic site, and just before the end of my senior year of high school, my best friend showed up with a job application for me for the park. There were two openings, and I think he figured he'd get one and I'd get the other. I got one, he got none. I felt bad, but not bad enough to turn the job down. It was only supposed to be for that summer, but it clicked, and my boss told me he felt I had a career in parks and he started teaching me maintenance, how to do the office paperwork, how to give guided walks, and other things that didn't pertain to my position as park receptionist (read: greets the public, collects fees, answers the phone, and answers questions). He also kept after me to rise up through the ranks and give me my second big break and my first promotion when he transferred to another park. I still call him every once in a while when I have a question or a dilemma, so I guess he's still my mentor.

Super Step Contributing Writer

06/13/2015 at 07:37 PM

Sounds like you've got your shit together. I need to get mine together as well.

Machocruz

06/13/2015 at 09:46 PM

Wut? You're always mad busy in your blogs. You're more productive than I was at your age.

Btw, you're one of the bloggers I'm emulating with this topic.

Super Step Contributing Writer

06/14/2015 at 02:40 AM

I was a lot more productive up until two weeks ago when I finally left my apartment after graduation. Since then I have bookmarked a bunch of jobs and neglected to apply to them or update my resume while living at my parents'. Your blog has inspired me to get my ass back in gear, though.

Machocruz

06/14/2015 at 03:05 PM

Yeah, just jump in feet first. It's not easy (job hunting is the most tedious, discouraging part), but the sooner the better ,and one thing has a way of leading to another. ANd have good social skills and grooming. I'm getting more calls from that catering service, but I had to turn yesterday's gig down because I don't have bartending experience.

You may have to cut down on the distractions, like video games, movies, etc.  But once you have your income settled and a routine down, you will be able to reintroduce those things little by little. And don't let pride get in the way; you may have to take something that isn't ideal or offer you the best hours, but like I said one thing leads...  I've been getting a lot of offers now because I'm willing to work odd hours or less hours, (which in my case, makes my scattershot resume less of a liability to them. Part time employers expect a certain amount of turnover/people with other jobs). I may put my commercial art career on hiatus and work a couple part time jobs while doing life sketching to develop new ideas and inspiration, expand my studio and set of tools.

and use all the tools and information that is out there. It may behoove you to get a resume assessment from someone who does such things.

Matt Snee Staff Writer

06/14/2015 at 12:18 AM

Yeah post world war despair is definitely a problem.  But like u said its best to be positive amd try to improve things.  Depression can be addictive, i know it.

i love slaughter house five.  What a unique book.  Ive read a few by him but slaughterhouse is definitely the masterpiece

Machocruz

06/14/2015 at 01:22 AM

S5 just happened to be the cheapest Vonnegut book at the book store I was at :D. I was annoyed because it used to be a neighborhood, discount book store, but now that there is no competition near by, their prices are almost full MSRP.  This says something about human nature, but right now I'm too tired to articulate what.

SanAndreas

06/15/2015 at 01:13 AM

Congrats on the new job. Keeping busy is important for fighting depression.

Stephen King has always considered Pet Sematary his scariest book, and it's one he was very reluctant to publish. There is a good reason for that: Gage is based on King's younger son, Owen, and the incident where he ran out into the road at the age of two as a tanker truck was coming down the highway was real. In real life, King was able to reach Owen in time and pull him to safety, but he was haunted so badly by the near-miss that he fell into depression. Pet Sematary was the result of his fears of what would have happened if he hadn't been able to save his son. He never intended to publish it until his wife read it and encouraged him to publish it as a way of dealing with his feelings. Gage's sister, Ellie, is based on King's daughter Naomi and her real-life grief and anger over the death of her cat was also worked into one of the book's scenes..

mothman

06/15/2015 at 02:31 PM

Good to hear that you are keeping busy and the volunteering is very good to have under your belt. Slaughterhouse 5 is one of my favourites. It's been a long time since I've read it though. Now that I'm doing a lot more reading (from nothing to a book or two a month is a lot more I guess) I may read that one again.

Machocruz

06/15/2015 at 04:25 PM

Depending on how busy you are, two books a month can be a lot. Or you have something like S5 which is only 200 pages, about. I finished that in a few hours.

mothman

06/15/2015 at 04:51 PM

When I have the choice I'm siding with reading over playing recently. 

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