oh my god we have to get back on this blog train. this scantness (is that  even a word? is it being used in the right context?) has gone on too long. it's  not even just a matter of WE'RE NOT BEING WRITERS and/or OUR JOBS ARE  INTERFERING WITH OUR REAL LIVES but we are just being non-blogging slackers,  let's just admit it here and now. what is it with this once-a-week trade-off  stuff? 
 :)
 so i've been watching season one episodes of The OC, four every weekend to  be exact, because i get the next DVD from Netflix, consume it rapidly, and then  have to wait a few days for the next one. anyway, i was watching one where  marissa hadn't yet figured oliver was crazy, and oliver was all like, let's go  up to l.a.! we'll do The Ivy and The Getty! and i was all like, oh my gosh, yes!  go! forget that he's crazy, marissa! because those are two things i did in  california last year and it was way fun! 
 so basically i'm saying that for a moment i was trying to live vicariously  through a fictional character from an outdated episode of a primetime soap  opera. 
 actually, though, i love my life. 
 i have decided this week to seriously, rigorously practice Disassociation  from All Stressful Things related to Customer Service. why? because i cannot  continue to define myself and my life this way or else i am going to be sorely  disappointed. severely depressed. and a bunch of other bad cliches.
 it really is true though. here was my idea that hit me yesterday, and tell  me what you think: could it be that i have chosen Customer Service as my  post-graduate "trade" not because it's the only marketable skill i have and i  "enjoy" it sometimes, but because i am really fulfilling some sort of childhood  neuroses whereby what i really enjoy is not getting yelled at. 
 like, whenever i am interviewing for a Customer Service-type position, i  always say, "I enjoy helping people." which i always thought was true. but maybe  in addition to helping people, or maybe instead of helping people, i  derive some sort of sad emotional reward from the customers who are not unhappy  with me. because my main motivation for doing a good job in Customer  Service, if you think about it, is not necessarily to make the client happy  (which it is, sometimes) but more to avoid getting yelled at. and i am most  depressed when they do yell. not just because they yelled, but because it leads  to all these feelings of "i don't have worth, yadda yadda" because all i am  doing is some menial job that a monkey could do and i can't even do that right.  
 when i was little, i was always sensitive to raised voices, even if they  weren't yelling. and it would follow that i was equally sensitive to praising  voices. maybe so much so that i based my self worth on them more so than the  average little bird? ick, i just don't want to be doing the same now, too much.  what if my psyche views my job as some twisted little game? 
 the horror, mendacious, the horror. 
 
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