Listen-a-long

I think about when i was in college…and just after collage which was my peak “doing stuff” years. Like I was always doing something. I was always going somewhere. I’d go two places in a day. I had a lot to do!
— Merlin Mann

The grand kids are busy being kids: one is washing the slide with the hose; one is helping Granddad paint the pantry doors; one is out on the street playing with the neighbour's kids.

The kitchen is tidy: dishwasher at the end of its cycle; bench is clear and clean; fridge is clean and rearranged; dinner is leftovers so ready-to-go.

Bedroom is half-arsed-tidy: laundry is almost done; devices are all charged; dog is snoozing on my half-made bed.

This is Sunday.

I've found a pocket of peace where I can knit the ears for the HopsAlots felted slippers I'm knitting for Chloe while listening to John Roderick and Merlin Mann talk to each other on their weekly podcast.

Listen along!

Now listen, there is no body in the world who loves constructing a theory based on two books he read and an Intro to Anthropology class that he took in the ‘80s more than me. I love that shit. I love to walk in the forest and see a rock and say ‘ya know, that rock probably [insert-bull-shit-theroy-here] igneous.
— John Roderick

Associated links:

Christian Living class landed me my dream job

I grew up attending Catholic schools. One of the subjects at my Catholic High School was called Christian Living. It's pretty much was as it says on the tin.

We did a little bit of Bible work, but mostly we talked about - or were lectured about - living the life of a good Christian soul. I’d relay what that might be but I wasn’t listening; mostly I drew in my Christian Living book - the beginning of a lifetime of doodling with intent.

I took notes and drew curly-cues, wrote quotes in large bubble lettering, traced around my hand and wrote Simon and Garfunkel lyrics around its shape on the paper.

More than anything, I traced comics in my Christian Living book. Cartoons and comics I found funny from magazines. I looked studious but as I mentioned, I wasn't even listening half the time. I filled book after book, taping them all together until I had this thick wodge of pages full of these drawings and tracings and lyrics and hardly a word about living like a Christian.

I may have been accused of wasting my time in that class had the teacher not been so beguiled by my doubling ways. I never thought much of what I was doing besides staving off boredom from information I didn't think was relevant or true; I certainly never thought that attending Christian Living class was going to land me a job, let alone my dream job - but it did. It was pretty much the only reason I got my draughting apprenticeship.

Oh I got the initial job of Draughting Office Clerk for all the other things I had learned at school like typing, and English, and all that jazz; had I not spent all those hours tracing comics and being confident with making marks would I have accumulated all the skills I needed to impress the draughtsmen when I was called upon to update plans.

My handwriting was pretty uniform after all those hours of copying fonts from the Speedball catalogue to spice up my Christian Living page headings; my eye for tracing through fairly think school exercise book paper meant using draughting canson paper was such a treat in comparison; my ability to use ink without smudging or blotting was honed from watching felt tipped pens dry while my teacher droned on about doing unto others as we would have them do unto us blah blah blah.

I remember being told when they offered me the apprenticeship that when they showed the head draughtsman my example plan and that of the other applicant who had 2 years actual draughting experience over mine, he had incorrectly guessed who had drawn which plan thinking mine was the one with the experienced hand - and therefore I got the job.  

Time is never wasted when you’re doing what you love to do.