Tuesday, April 10, 2007

The Cantata

On Sunday, April 1, 2007 (no foolin’) I sang an original cantata with my church choir. We had 200 people in attendance and it was a big smash hit! A fellow choir member who was not able to perform, said that she loved watching me and that I was very intense and very into the music. I loved all the songs, but the second song, where Jesus is telling the people at the temple to “Get out! Get out! Get out!” was one of my favorites. The lyrics are based on the gospels of the new testament and told a very complete tale of the last week of Jesus.

Everyone in attendance were moved by the wonderful music – especially since our choir director, Ken Potter, wrote it all in only 5 days! Ken had a gigantic smile on his face and you could tell that he was just SOOO PROUD of both the choir and how well it all came together. The Cantata will be sent to the Library of Congress and I’m sure it will be published as it is truly a great musical feat! I am excited to have been a part of the premiere performance and I have one of the original scores signed by the composer. How exciting!

Sunday, April 01, 2007

Welcome to Holland

Today I am going to post a poem by Emily Perl Kingsley - "Welcome to Holland". This is a very beautiful and moving poem that touched my heart. Enjoy!

WELCOME TO HOLLAND

I am often asked to describe the experience of raising a child with a disability - to try to help people who have not shared that unique experience to understand it, to imagine how it would feel. It's like this......

When you're going to have a baby, it's like planning a fabulous vacation trip - to Italy. You buy a bunch of guide books and make your wonderful plans. The Coliseum. The Michelangelo David. The gondolas in Venice. You may learn some handy phrases in Italian. It's all very exciting.

After months of eager anticipation, the day finally arrives. You pack your bags and off you go. Several hours later, the plane lands. The stewardess comes in and says, "Welcome to Holland."

"Holland?!?" you say. "What do you mean Holland?? I signed up for Italy! I'm supposed to be in Italy. All my life I've dreamed of going to Italy."

But there's been a change in the flight plan. They've landed in Holland and there you must stay.

The important thing is that they haven't taken you to a horrible, disgusting, filthy place, full of pestilence, famine and disease. It's just a different place.

So you must go out and buy new guide books. And you must learn a whole new language. And you will meet a whole new group of people you would never have met.

It's just a different place. It's slower-paced than Italy, less flashy than Italy. But after you've been there for a while and you catch your breath, you look around.... and you begin to notice that Holland has windmills....and Holland has tulips. Holland even has Rembrandts.

But everyone you know is busy coming and going from Italy... and they're all bragging about what a wonderful time they had there. And for the rest of your life, you will say "Yes, that's where I was supposed to go. That's what I had planned."

And the pain of that will never, ever, ever, ever go away... because the loss of that dream is a very very significant loss.

But... if you spend your life mourning the fact that you didn't get to Italy, you may never be free to enjoy the very special, the very lovely things ... about Holland.


Friday, March 30, 2007

Catch up

I have been working for the last five weeks at Honda. The atmosphere is great, very friendly people and lots of men to look at on my floor (I work in the Motorcycle Division, in the Press Department). A good habit that I have started since I am working at Honda is that I try to walk every morning before work. This seems to help my general mood and my energy level and make it easier to make it through the day when there is not enough work to do. One of the projects my department is working on is a loan system in Access. I am a multi-faceted individual and I have to confess that I am a bit of a computer nerd. I love working with computer systems and trying out new things. Yesterday I was planning to "play" with the system all day. Everyone in the office was gone yesterday but me. Boy did I have a surprise when I got to work!

I was busier yesterday than any other day I have been there! Lots of little things I had been working on got completed, the phone was busier, and my boss called with a task for me to do. But I got rid of the big box in the cubicle next to me (stuff to return to the vendor), I finally reached the right person to be able to get a smaller size shirt for my boss (this one I've been
working on for about a week), I made some preliminary notes about the loan system, and I was exhausted by the end of the day!

Other things that I have been doing lately include lots of knitting. I made a cotton dishcloth that didn't come out quite right. I will try the pattern again sometime in the near future. It is an interesting pattern as it decreases and increases in the same row. It came out to be a rectangle and it should be square. I was in too much of a hurry to finish it so it also is wider at one end than the other. (After I took this picture, I used the dishcloth to wipe off my washing machine).

I have also been doing some crocheting. I made this granny square afghan for a friend, Chin, whose daughter is expecting a little girl in May. I also gave her the knitted pink hat shown here. The green hat I gave to Stitches from the Heart. Several of the ladies in my knitting guild work at the yarn store of Stitches from the Heart, so I gave the hat to Brandi at my last guild meeting.

My choir is working on an Easter Cantata that we will be singing on Psalm Sunday (in three days!) It is an original work written by our choir director, Ken Potter, on a cruise to Mexico in five short days. It is a wonderful work and I pray that the church will be packed - standing room only - on Sunday. We had our final rehearsal last night and we are pretty close. The accompaniment is all on CD and some of the songs are pretty fast! But the joy on his face tells us we are donig a great job - he is so proud! The choir is very proud and honored to be doing the first performance of this great work!

That is enough for this morning, I will write again on Sunday after the Cantata and tell about how it went, how packed the church was etc. Happy Friday!


Thursday, February 22, 2007

Update on me

On my last post I talked about a temporary job for an accounting firm. My assignment ended the following day. My co-worker was not aware that my background is Human Resources, not Finance. I had an interview for an HRIS position at a TV/movie studio later that day, so since I had told him that I work in HR he gave me his phone number in case any openings come up in his field. Just goes to show that I wasn't the only one who disliked the chaos at the firm....lol.

P.S. I didn't get the job at the studio - not enough experience. I am now working a temporary assignment at the Honda corporate office.

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

My current temporary assignment

I am currently working a temporary job at an accounting firm. This is amusing for three reasons; 1) I have never worked in accounting; 2) Attention to detail is not always my strong point; and 3) the reason I got this position was because of my knowledge of PeopleSoft software – which I have yet to use for this assignment. The job was originally supposed to last for approximate 2 weeks. I started on a Thursday and am now entering my third full week. I am working on fixed asset accounts from 2006 and just yesterday finished the 1st quarter. I was ill last week and missed a couple days of work. I made the mistake of telling the temporary agency that I would be there for certain on the second day. When I called the recruiter from the agency on the second day, she asked if I could go in for at least a few hours. I went in at 1 that day and worked for four hours. The next day I worked for four hours in the morning and started to feel bad again, so I went home at lunch for the day.

Today I had a dental appointment and had to leave early. In an effort to be conscientious I went in at 7:30 so that I could work 6 hours. Since I had finished Q1 yesterday, I needed some new reports to continue with the Q2 reconciliation. I asked when I came in for the reports, and was told that they only took a few minutes to run. The person I am helping with the project said he had to finish the task he was working on and would then run the reports. At 9:30 I finally got some work to do – nothing to do with the other project I have been working on. In the time I was waiting for reports, I talked to the woman at my temporary agency. I asked if she knew when the assignment was scheduled to end. She said she would have to check. I told her that my last day at the assignment would be Thursday, February 15th because I am having dental surgery on the 16th. She is going to find a replacement for me and I will cross train that individual for 2-3 days.

It is an interesting place to work, and the people are not organized. The guy that I am helping first explained the project/process piecemeal. I was given two Excel reports – one for the General Ledger (GL) entries and one for the AM account. I was to compare the two accounts and find the matching entries. The AM report has department numbers, asset numbers and invoice numbers, the GL report had only department numbers to match up the AM entries against. At one point, it was mentioned that a GL report with invoices could be run. This was after a few days of trying to match up the accounts with no real cross reference numbers. I finally asked for a revised GL report and was eventually also given the corresponding invoices for the entries. This helped a great deal. It is very hard to match information when you are not given all the tools or pieces needed to get to the final result.

I am hoping that I will have the reports I need to start Q2 when I go in to work tomorrow. I have an interview tomorrow afternoon for a 3 month temporary job as an Human Resources Information Systems (HRIS) Analyst with a possibility of a permanent position. I will write tomorrow about the interview…so stay tuned.

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

The joy of interviewing

I had my third set of interviews at the CPA firm yesterday. I wish I could say that I felt it went well. I met with five different people yesterday afternoon. I was early – I got off at 11, had lunch and drove out there. I was there at around noon – my first interview wasn’t until 1:15 – so I went to Ralphs and killed about 30 minutes. I still got there at about 12:45. At 1 p.m. the receptionist called the HR manager, and she came out briefly at around 1:05 – and made a comment that I was still a little early. She came back at around 1:20 or so. I met with the HR manager first, who I had met before. One of her first questions to me was on a scale of 1 – 10, how excited are you about this job? I said 7 – then she asked me why not 9 or 10 – so I amended my answer to “I guess closer to a 9.” Not a good way to start off…I asked her about the interviews and she said each one would vary in style. Each interview was scheduled for 30 minutes.

First I met with the Regional Tax Administrative Coordinator from the San Jose office. Very sharp lady – who had some interesting questions. I felt pretty confident about most of the answers that I gave her – she had some interesting questions – She gave me a list of five things and asked me to rank them in order of importance: Timekeeping, Attendance, Professionalism, Personality, and Communication. I ranked them Professionalism, Personality, Communication, Attendance and Timekeeping. Then I explained why – I said it is important to always be professional, timekeeping was last because it was least important of the list. I don’t remember what I said exactly.

A second list – much easier was: rate the following in terms of a project: Accuracy, Speed, Timeliness, and Overall Presentation. I ranked Accuracy first, then Overall Presentation, Timeliness and Speed. I said that you would think that timeliness and speed would be the same thing – but timeliness is more important – speed may mean mistakes. Another interesting question was if I were an animal – what animal would I be? My first response was a monkey because that was the first thing that popped into my head. She said I didn’t seem like a monkey. So I said a bird because I would like to be free and be able to fly. I asked her what animal she would be and she said a cat. Why didn’t I come up with that when she asked????

Next I met with tax partner 1. Very nice gentleman – seems easy going but expects you to file the stuff on his desk. He said that it was a very high stress environment. He stated that most of the stuff on his desk is completed. If he is out of the office and needs a file, I would be expected to find it in his office. I was imagining a list of files and their locations on a spreadsheet. First thing every morning he would like me to come into his office and discuss the priorities of the day. I may have talked too much about this – I said that I liked the idea because I had a boss who was hard to pin down sometimes and hard to get 5 minutes with. Not sure that was a good example.

Towards the end of the interview I asked him what type of person he was looking for. He said someone who is high energy (mentioned it two or three times) and someone who is not highly emotional. I sat there wondering how do you portray "high energy" in an interview? I do not perceive myself as coming across as high energy in an interview setting. I said something about that when there is an error, more important to fix the error than focus on why the error was made. When he asked me about my weakness, I said my weakness was lack of attention to detail – which is true – but I’m not sure the best answer to give.

I then met with partner 2. I wasn’t quite sure what to think about this guy. He didn’t have any questions prepared and so he asked me if I knew the differences of working in a professional firm, like a CPA firm. So he explained how professional firms are people who were managing their own clients, as opposed to supporting projects or groups as in aerospace. He comes from a law background and has been in the accounting business for the past ten years. He kept asking me if I had any questions, and I couldn’t think of any. I did mention at one point that if I am not busy, I will find work to do. He cautioned me that that is not a good idea at this company.

Tax partner 2 never really mentioned what he would need me to do for him. Explained that the company was very friendly and peopled moved up if they wanted to. He said that if you find something to do – then the responsibility becomes yours. He asked what I liked to do and I said traveling, photography, and knitting. He cringed when I mentioned knitting – his wife is a knitter and apparently he was knitted things all over his house. Then I mentioned music (he had a poster on his office wall that was from a Bach concert) and he told me that he plays the cello and we talked about music for a while. On the way home, I remembered that on my second set of interviews, the administrative assistant that was part of the interview team, mentioned that there was one tax partner who would come and want to talk for an hour or so - I have a feeling this is who she was talking about.

The final person was the junior member of the team, the tax manager. Very friendly, easy going person – didn’t have any questions – said he only needed a letter typed from time to time. Very low maintenance. He said he enjoyed working there and everyone was really easy to work with.

Lastly, I met with the HR manager again. She asked me how I thought it went, I said fine but mentioned that I didn’t feel that Michael was very prepared but how he had explained the differences of working for a professional firm. She kind of surprised me, because she said that she had been looking over my resume. She saw my extensive HR experience, working with projects etc. Why I was interested – how would this job be a challenge for me? I don’t remember my specific answer to this question. She then asked me where I would like to be in 1 to 5 years. I said either a consultant or manager. She asked in what field – and I said probably HR. I should find out by Monday at the latest.

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Red scarf project











This month I am working on red scarves for the Red Scarf Project that is for the Orphan Foundation of America. The scarves go to foster children who are attending college. The scarves shown here are done in cherry red - one a straight knit and one a ribbed scarf. I bought a yarn called "Choco Cherry" that is a variegated yarn that I hope will knit up very nicely. I will post the other scarves as I finish them. Check out the link and find out about the project. If you knit or crochet - make a scarf. There are other ways to contribute too by sending words of encouragement or becoming a mentor.