

Henceforth I spiral into geekhood.
Aside from that, I'm pretty sure I didn't get the jobs from the interview (NNNNNNNNNNOOOO) and i'm slightly depressed about it. None the less, i've still got a few jobs to apply to. I took the job at the bookstore; i'm working a month at the bookstore to help with the back to school supplies. My new goal for work now is to basically keep looking for jobs during the month i'm working there. If at the end of the month (aka september 15th) I still have no job in sight, I'll go to an agency for sure. All I have to decide is whether I want this agency to be in Montréal or Ottawa.
Either way, i'm moving. I watched a show on tv while drawing today and for some reason, it petrified me and made me want to move. Even if It's in Ottawa and just for a year, i'm getting an appartment. And if it's in Montréal, i've got no choice.
My mother was rather understanding. I think it's because she went thru a similar thing when she was a graduate (she moved from the north to Ottawa to be with my father). She would still prefer if I stayed home, but she said I was in a periode of change and that if I didn't jump soon, i'd miss my boat and get to scared to jump.
Sorry for all the annoying job-talk. I need some support in that area though, so bear with me gang XD...
-Isa
I think your mom is right
Date: 2008-08-01 07:58 am (UTC)And hell, you actually have people lining themselves up to be your room mate.
You deserve your freedome and personnal space more than the large majority of people I know.
You have an amazing potential and I see it growing every time I see you.
With that, I bid you good night.
Link (Ton cheri)
no subject
Date: 2008-08-01 10:05 am (UTC)That's really unfortunate about the job thing, but maybe you do need to move out and get a fresh start somewhere else anyway. (Just make sure you room with a reliable roommate.) I agree with your other half's comment above mine.
Time to get out and see the world, and hopefully shake down some jobs elsewhere in the grand Canadian territory.
(Or something like that. Don't ask me, I'm starting to realize that my own move across the U.S. is quickly coming.) o.O
no subject
Date: 2008-08-01 02:43 pm (UTC)I miss my daughter very, very much. She's now hundreds of miles away, but after she boomeranged home for a couple years, her moving away, despite no job, was the best thing for all of us. Parents, as well as their adult children, can feel restricted when they live together. Parents and children can be more "themselves" when living apart. There are pluses and minuses, of course, but somehow living apart makes for easier "breathing" and makes getting together sweeter and less an exercise in tongue biting. Leaving the nest should make a child grow, and guess what, it works for parents, too. Both parent and child can make new discoveries and rethink things. I found that out with my own parents and was very pleasantly surprised.