Filed under Job

Pros and Cons of Working at Home…

You no longer have to commute during rush hour with the hoi poloi, the great unwashed, the ‘general public’.
INSTEAD
: You begin to formulate opinions listening to banal radio phone ins including ‘How to escape a rabid dog” and “What do you think would happen if there was no moon”.

No more awkward conversations with the person who works at the office but whose name you can’t quite remember.
INSTEAD: You see no one and terrify delivery men who back away slowly, as you now see them as potential new friends.

You can have lunch whenever you like.
INSTEAD:
You forget to have lunch as you’re far too busy.

No more holiday or sick pay.
INSTEAD: You can work in your pajamas and take a month to go to New York and no one bats an eyelid.

No more RSI or back troubles from cheap office furniture.
INSTEAD: Your living room and bedroom become your office and bed sores become a realistic threat.

No more mundane conversations with office co-workers whose lives are so dull even if they found the Turin shroud on the dead body of Amelia Earhart on the weekend, it would be tedious.
INSTEAD:
Putting up with mundane conversations with your neighbour who wants you to care about the state of hallway skirting boards as much as he does.

Thankfully, no more monthly emails entitled “Join us in boardroom to raise a glass and say a fond farewell to…”
INSTEAD:
No more getting twatted on the boss’s credit card – as it has your name on it now.

Secret Santa becomes rather limiting and obvious.
INSTEAD: No more awkward Christmas party.

No more having to justify that expensive lunch to your boss.
INSTEAD: Your company expenses now include your rent and electricity.

National Insurance and Tax was the Finance department’s worry.
INSTEAD: National Insurance and Tax is your worry and makes your head bleed from the inside.

Friends resent your newly discovered lifestyle.
INSTEAD: The phrase ’9 to 5′ makes you feel so smug and superior, you so don’t care anyway.

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At the bottom of the U…

I don’t want to alarm you all with another seemingly negative and quite possibly depressing blog entry but I am having to write about the last month of my life, which can only be described as one of the hardest periods of my life in a very long time. Hence the lack of entries on my blog.

The dangerous concoction of unemployment, limited cash flow, no immediate friends, love life frustrations and a career and life dilemma has resulted in a very dark period for me. Yes, folks I’m going through a swell time at the moment. The initial “I’m going to live in Australia” decision is now very real. The life changing action of moving one’s life abroad has reared it’s real and very ugly head. Warts and all. Incredibly unforgiving and unglamorous too. The positive to this, is that the only way is up hopefully, plus the stress has made me loose quite a bit of weight and with the combination of a tan I look great! Although, if it gets any worse I may have knock on door of that omnipresent deity that claims to run my life and ask for my money back.

‘Stir crazy’ are the words to describe the time I have to myself whilst looking for a new job and I have way too much time to think. Not good for someone like me who has an internal ‘Woody Allen‘ inside of him. I am hoping this week will change everything and that I will secure the job I’ve set my sights on for the last month. I’m sending those positive vibes out into the universe and claiming it as my own. I know I would do a good job in that role and I could really grow into the role. Watch this space as they say.

My new found friendships have also been affected by this lull and my relationships with those I care about deeply have also unfortunately been victims to this. As well as this being thoroughly distressing, I find myself regressing and unable to grasp the bigger picture and losing my confidence completely in situations that would have never bothered me years ago.

So as I brush the crap off myself now and face the world straight on, I can only have faith that the next step goes up! Watch this space…

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Making That Next Step…

Over the last few months I have been a little frustrated with the fact that even though I have made the huge plunge transferring my life to another part of the world to essentially sort my life out, I have in fact, made myself quite directionless for the time being. I find myself with no drive to continue pursuing the career I have built up these past few years and yet have a huge degree of caution considering the somewhat possible professional suicide nature of giving it all up to pursue a totally different career. Depending on who I talk to, advice is varied and full of opinion as one would expect. Full of the familiar phrases you hear when mulling over these big life decisions. It’s not really a case of me taking control of my own life to solve this. It’s about whether or not I want to spend the time fixing something I may not want to be fixed in the first place.

Luck. Life Choices. Destiny and Gut Instinct are phrases we use to justify what life hands us. It never really explains why that son of a bitch has got that promotion you wanted or why your lovely friend who has cancer has also lost her job. (By the way, I don’t actually know these people they exist purely for my moral conundrum).

I am negotiating with my internal compass at the moment. Wondering if decisions regarding my career would be as hard as it is now, had I made a different choice all those years ago. I will of course never know. Only dreams and doubt offer any form of resolution there and I refuse to harp back to a better time or regret the choices I’ve made. Well, maybe a one or two. I’m just questioning why my choices have meant going against the grain a little too often, ascending that steep hill when I could have gone up the footpath just over there. Is something greater telling me I’m not meant to be doing what I’m doing? I feel it’s time to challenge this before it’s too late or otherwise I may resign myself to accepting my circumstances.

“Well, what can I say to that Richard?” I hear you cry. Well, nothing. I just wanted to get that out in the open. Clear my head space as always before those thoughts bounce round my cranium any further. I agree what most are probably thinking – the grass is greener, we make the best choices to suit the situation we’re in, all our lives are a random path and so on.

I have realised my old life back in London was chockablock. I was ultra, mega, stupendously busy. Even my hobbies were time consuming.

I went to work.
I went to screenings after work
I rehearsed for 10 months of the year.
I did a show twice a year.
I did the marketing for the shows.
I did tap classes.
I did singing classes.
I ‘tried’ to write.
I wrote a blog.
I tried to date.
I socialised.
I saw my friends.
I hosted dinner parties & events.
I went to the gym.
And so on…

I did many other things and it’s taken my sister to suggest perhaps my body and mind have decided to shut down for a bit and have a rest since arriving here in Australia. It makes sense why I feel so ‘spent’. So I find myself only handling a few tasks and wondering why I don’t have the drive or imagination to push myself again. I’m no longer content repeating my life in the same way and its forced me into a limbo period. Much like my friend Charlie, I constantly want to push myself further and never take the time to take stock and reflect on what I’ve achieved most of the time but here I am looking at my life at last. Apologies if most of what I am writing is drivel.

How many of really have control over our ‘life choices’? Deepak Chopra’s tells us to send our dreams out there and they will come back to you, Paul McKenna tells us to hypnotise ourselves into positive thinking, others just say work hard and you will be rewarded. Whatever we use to justify and focus our minds to the job in hand, the cynic inside of me wonders whether in fact it’s a choice between the lesser of two evils or perhaps not having worthwhile obvious choice laid out before us. I am reading a biography of Stephen Sondheim at the moment. I wanted to discover how the greatest musical theatre composer of our time came to be where he is now by battling against the odds and facing permanent rejection, but in fact it’s quite the opposite. Sondheim was, dare I say it, in a privileged situation to be able to achieve. I’m not saying it wasn’t easy for him but many factors of his upbringing and the people he either knew or was introduced to, sure helped to forge the person he is now today. For example, being partially raised by the Hammersteins as young boy and Sondheim was also Manhattan upper class thanks to his parents social status. Yes, I thought ‘Lucky bugger’ too. Although, he had a mother who declared his birth was the worse thing that happened to her life, so it’s not all ‘coming up roses‘ as Sondheim would write.

Luck I’ve decided, is dependent on someone giving you the dice to throw in the first place.

Perhaps I’m not meant to be living this particular life. Perhaps it’s time I should listen to my gut instincts despite the world furrowing it’s responsible brow at me. Give myself a little faith I usually reserve for others. Go get that dream and really do have no regrets.

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Beyond Useless…


“Hi there, how’s Australia treating you?”

“Umm, er, it’s treating me fine I suppose. Thank you for seeing me.”

“So, you’ve come to Australia to look for work? How exciting. Now, just to let you know the job advertisement you responded to isn’t available now.”

“The entertainment marketing job?”

“Yes, that’s the one. Don’t worry, after that ruse I’m sure we can find you something.”

“Oh.”

“I know. You’re qualifications were perfect for that job, weren’t they? We don’t have anything at the moment, but it’s great that we finally get the chance to meet so I get to waste more of your time.”

“Right, so I filled in this application form for nothing? Why does it ask for bank details by the way and what’s with the question ‘If you were a brand what would you be?’ is this you trying to be hip and relevant or something?”

“Oh you don’t need to worry about that. So, tell me a little bit about yourself while I think about what I’m going to have for lunch today.”

“Well, I’ve had a varied career as Art Director, Marketing Manager and Account Manager. I’ve had extensive experience in the field of creative, marketing and advertising and now specialise in entertainment design but not exclusively… excuse me, are you just nodding at me politely?”

“Yes… a low fat salad is what I’ll have. Now, I will be phoning my ‘contacts’ to see if I can drum up some interest in you. I’m also going to say a lot of big, exciting company names to you now and make it sound as I know every one of them personally, when in fact, I only know the HR manager who only reluctantly takes my calls as I constantly hound them. Does that sound like something convincing?”

“Well, a job working for a successful company sounds great, but…”

“Fantastic! Now, do you see yourself as more a creative than a strategic person, would you consider working agency side perhaps? I only ask this just to make me sound as though I know something about your job. I just don’t want you to know I’m actually listening for several unrelated keywords from which I will feebly attempt to match you against a highly inappropriate job spec.”

Umm, well I’m a trained creative person but have had strategic…”

“That’s great, that’s all I needed to hear. I see you also have a working holiday visa?”

“Yes, I… Why did you just pull that face?”

“Have you seen any other recruitment agencies or gone for any interviews so far? Be careful now, I know I look anodyne and false but I will shaft your potential career prospects if I find out you’re not just using me. And if there’s any chance I can put another candidate against you for a job, I will do it.”

“Umm…NO? You’re the first person I’ve seen actually.”

“Great. I’ll be as useless as the next agency you see anyway.”

“Fine. I’m just slowly getting disillusioned about job hunting, you might as well kill the last ounce of hope I have left. If you continue to annoy me I’ll just remind you that your only other career options were probably lawyer or estate agent. Is there anything else you need to know? Do you need to scribble any more doodles of flowers and swirly patterns on my CV or is that it?”

“No, I have everything. Just to let you know, I won’t be calling you for a few weeks, if that’s okay with you? Do keep in touch though and let me know how the job hunting is going your end. Just so I can field your calls and say ‘Nothing has come in yet’. I’ll eventually return one of your calls and suggest some crappy job spec we’ve had lying round the office for some time, hoping it may distract from how unhelpful I’ve been. By then, you’ll get an idea of how we operate.”

“Well, thanks for speaking at me. It’s been pure joy. Perhaps I should have spent it more productively figuring how many of your business cards I could fit in your mouth?”

“It’s been great to finally meet you too. Hopefully we can get you the job that fits you perfectly Robert.”

“It’s Richard.”

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Wandering and wondering….

I started writing this to a friend and realised it was probably eloquent enough to put on here too with a few editorial tweaks.

It’s my fourth week in Sydney now and as I sit here typing away at my laptop, thinking about how my life has changed, watching the unannounced clouds roll into the bay where I live (It’s going to heave it down tonight with fantastic thunderstorm later – see, even the weather here is more interesting) I realised I’m just unemployed and wearing less clothes. However, it’s not that bad really. It is hotter here and although I’m not cold at all, because I’m British I can’t help thinking I may need an extra layer when I go out – just in case. It’s a habit I have to break out of as I end up carrying a lot of useless crap around with me.

Life here is still in a state of limbo. It’s not the worse state to be in but I’m desperately needing my own job and space now so I start my ‘new life’ in full. I went on the ferry to Circular Quays last week for an interview one morning. It was a spectacular Australian morning. A solid blue sky, as if someone had neatly selected the fill button on Human Nature’s Photoshop and given the sky one hue of ‘Blue’. I stood on the top deck of the ferry, allowing the breeze to dance through my hair and flutter against my face. I wore my aviator sunglasses, a crisp white cotton shirt, jeans and gracefully sat back to listen to Carly Simon’s Let The River Run from the movie Working Girl. For a moment, I was Melanie Griffiths as Tess MgGill starting her first day of work, although for me it was my new life. Only then, for the first time since I arrived here did I think, “Richard. Everything is going to be okay.”

It is nice to have open friendly public around you though when you make a significant move like this. Not have people who refuse to give you eye contact or glare into your soul if you invade their personal space on a train, bus or pavement, which pretty much sums up London’s attitude to anyone and, I am ashamed to say, I was one of those people. (It’s not quirky and eccentrically British – it’s plain rude.) My initial spontaneity has been replaced with partial restlessness now and I fear for when order gets reintroduced into my life again, as I keep being told to enjoy the free time I currently have. I can’t help knowing the organised part of me would like a ‘Start Date’ so it can schedule in events into my .Mac account calendar and buy trainers without guilt. I’m sure it will all fall into place come once the job arrives. I must learn to curb my impatience in the meantime.

I am enjoying the weather as it’s not it’s usual unbearably hot and more like a good British summer. I like seeing the water. It’s everywhere and it’s very calming. Even if you’re in the middle of the city and your standing next to a man-made fountain it still has the same effect on you.

I went out on Oxford St, the gay district of Sydney last night and realised I loathe the scene wherever it may be. No new revelation there. Over here they’re more vain and are usually ‘off their tits’ on something quite early on in the evening. This tends to stop when they reach 35 apparently, looking at the rental ads I saw last week. As then, they tend buy small dogs and apartments with great views of the harbour. I say this only as all the ads I’ve read are by gay men in their mid/late 30s who own amazing flats and a hairy collared animal who they describe as ‘My Baby’ or ‘Chico’ and always end their ad with the line “I do not tolerate drug users.”

A spark of originality is all I ask for in a gay man. Please! My quest may continue a little longer perhaps.

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Behind the curtain…

It’s been a long time since I’ve written in this thing and for good reason. As you may know, this month was going to be pretty intense what with ‘Anything Goes’ rehearsals and it culminating with ‘Show Time’ last week. I could write all sorts about the experience, it has conjured up a lot of mixed emotions, mostly positive I must add, and it has shown me what sort of new things I am capable of. I have made some unexpected new friends, rediscovered my ‘chest’ and ‘head’ voice and have learnt that tap shoes are cheaper if you ‘bulk buy’ from a catalogue. It was incredibly important for me to do something for myself at this stage in my life, to find focus and to get away from the elements in my life that were grinding me down. Talking to the friends I have made in the cast now, I wasn’t the only one feeling the same way about my life when I considered joining. Whether this makes me a cliche or not, or just plain normal, who cares. Truth be told, it worked, and I discovered a side to me that I had forgotten about a long time ago. As much as I like to perform to friends, I have certainly mellowed over the years, pruning that side of my flamboyant personality into something vaguely acceptable for ‘day-to-day’ society. Actors usually tend to let this side of themselves overgrow and flourish into every part of their lives, leaving themselves a tad self-centred and overtly dramatic most of the time but also acquiring a ‘steamrolller’ sense of total confidence and magnetic appeal I find admirable in some respects, especially as I think far too much about how I am perceived and worry over the actions I take. This show, has bought a lot of confidence and warmth of enthusiasm I seem to have lost years ago. The experience did however make me slightly bitchy again, luckily other cast members remarked they felt the same way. So I didn’t feel too bad about this unwanted and new personality trait and I’ve made a conscious effort to suppress it.

The variety of new people who are now a part of my life is also quite remarkable. They really are from a different mould all together. I’ve been so lucky to have shared this part of my life with them. As I nursed my ‘aftershow party’ hangovers with a fellow co-cast member, he remarked how much the show had changed his life, given him a new found passion, something to think about outside work, that he no longer felt ‘lost’. You can’t help feeling totally beholden and in awe of that. Something so simple as an after work hobby could mean so much to someone. On reflection, it has undoubtably breathed new life into my stale routine too. The emotional and intense path has thrust some issues to the forefront of my subconsciousness, many of which I have failed to address for years. There is nothing like doing something that scares you, in order to beat your fears and build a sense of internal growth. Along with the eccentric personalities who have crossed my path, and without sounding cringeworthy, I hope I’ve made some true long term friends out of the show. Diva personalities and weirdos aside, there are definitely a select few, that over time, I can see, not only belting out a show tune with, but also laughing in a crowded bar at 3am or having a heart-to-heart with over a piece of badly made toast. The ever popular Charles is definitely one of them. He’s surprised me in so many ways and he’s probably not aware that over these past few months, he’s taught me a lot of life lessons and shown me how to be focused and believe in yourself. I need to thank him for that.

So, onwards. Questions about 2007 and my future plans have drifted into my thoughts. I want to do ‘Bat Boy’, the next Centre Stage show. Again, it will take up a huge chunk of my life. I do have to think about seriously confirming my Australia plans in the new year. Life has thrown me an interesting curve ball, I just have to use it to its advantage now.

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Asides…

I heard the best line at work today from my client, when he was describing how ugly his old assistant was:

“About as attractive as an old ‘Chupa Chup‘ lolly found underneath a greasy oven.”

Will go into my mental rollerdex of phrases to use on someone one day.

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