Nov. 27th, 2007

andrewmck: (Default)
It has been a strange time for me over the past 6mths, adjusting as my wife's job grows and grows.

In less than twelve months of being there, she is now Acting Head of a section spanning four departments - Finance, Procurement and her own areas of Insurance & Risk Management. This is partly due to the Dept.Head (her big boss) being away on extended leave for family reasons. An extended leave that is looking like it might be 3 or 4 months minimum!

So, instead of just being the Manager of Insurance & Risk, she is now responsible for about an extra 30 staff under a number of different managers across a range of disciplines. Most of those managers (at the same level as my wife) have been there for 5 to 10 years. Strangely, the fact they've been there so long, and my wife has been promoted above them after only 9mths doesn't seem to have bothered them much. There doesn't seem to be any snarkiness or rivalry at her appointment. On the contrary, she says they've all been wonderful.

Unfortunately, this has all meant a lot of extra work for her. She is working a lot later, getting home later and, when she finally does get home, she pulls out the laptop and keeps on working. Weekends too! She is the sort of person who revels in this type of thing. As long as she has reports to do and spreadsheets to pour over, she's happy.

She's also been away interstate about 2 weeks out of every 5 for the past two months. Currently she is at the annual Risk Management conference on the Gold Coast. She's been there since the start of the weekend. I do wonder which sleazy old Risk Manager organised a conference on the Gold Coast during Schoolies Week though. It is a bit of a boys club, which maybe explains the decision of the old perverts. But my wife is enjoying it. She was asked to present a paper on "Climate Change and Risk Management" which apparently went well. Today, she is chairing a panel with some big o'seas guest speaker.

Last week she was in Brisbane for talks with their Insurers. Before that it was Melbourne.

I am extremely happy about all this. She is really forging ahead with her career, and I'm sort of enjoying being a 'kept man' :)

It has meant a lot of changes in our life-style though, and with me being the 'house mum' all the time, it is getting increasingly hard for me to run my business. There just isn't time to do the clothes washing and ironing, wash the dishes, help with homework, cook the dinners, keep the boys from killing each other, etc etc and keep in contact with all my clients and do their work as well.

If I try to be 'house mum/dad' and 'small business owner' at the same time, it leaves me no room for writing and illustration.

So, I've been cutting back on my client roster. I've only kept those clients I have a really close relationship with, and those are generally the smarter ones who don't need hand-holding every second of the day and night. That should make things a lot easier, and leave me more room for writing.

I think the hardest thing to get used to though is the silence. When you've lived with someone for going on 18yrs it is very strange sleeping in an empty bed at night, with no one beside you. It gets where you don't notice they're there once you're asleep, but if they're NOT there sleep comes very hard indeed. It is quite amazing how comforting the sound of a person's breathing can become to you. Of all things, that's what I've been missing most - the sound of her breath, the little giggles and noises as she dreams - the things we normally don't notice but when they're gone they leave a void. The night is so silent without her that I can barely sleep. I'm so looking forward to her return on Wednesday.
andrewmck: (Default)

Not as strict, nor as meticulously worked out, as [livejournal.com profile] markdeniz's upcoming list, here is my list of:

Favourite Albums I've Bought This Year

1. Something for Kate - Desert Lights (They just get better and better with every album. Paul Dempsey's lyrics are masterful.)

2. Editors - An End Has a Start (I loved their first album, but this one is just superb)

3. Bats for Lashes - Fur and Gold (released 2006, but only lately heard of them - thanks Mark!)

4. The National - Boxer (I thought 'Alligator' was a better album at first, but repeated listens proved otherwise)

5. C.W.Stoneking - King Hokum (also released 2006, but I only found out about it this year and I couldn't pass it up. Definitely a favourite of mine now, but it probably won't be to the taste of others - Hokum Blues, bawdy vaudeville lyrics, all orignal but it sounds 80yrs old. I love it!)

6. Radiohead - In Rainbows (I was happy to pay for this one! A return to the majesty of OK Computer and Amnesiac)

7. Okkervil River - The Stage Names (downloaded from e-music on a whim when I had some credits left over. I'm so glad I did!)

8. Kings of Leon - Because of the Times (these boys are maturing fast! a bit of a shock on first listen at the changes they've made and the departure from the swaggering swamp-rock of their first two albums, but this one really grew on me. Now my favourite KoL album)

9. Interpol - Our Love to Admire (I've never been too sure about Interpol. Do I like them because they're Interpol, or because they sound like Joy Division and the Psychedelic Furs mixed up in some strange teenage reversion? I was very disappointed by this album at first. In fact, I think I hated it. I suprised myself a few weeks later when I realised I had been listening to it more than any other album! It is the same old Interpol, and yet, there is something different. A depth of layering that wasn't there before. Anyway, I like it now.)

10. Powderfinger - Dream Days at the Hotel Existence (a great powderfinger album, but strangely diluted in its power by the previous release of lead singer fanning's solo album which covered some of the same sounds and themes)

andrewmck: (Default)
I love my music, and I've always gone out of my way to find something new and interesting. I thought I'd plumbed the depths of the 60s through to the 90s and have been well and truly seeking out 'new' music for a few years.

Sometimes something comes along though that makes me feel like I've been living in a musical vacuum!

How could I have not EVER listened to Dead Can Dance!?

I just cannot believe I missed something like this until tonight.

I guess I still have a lot of music I need to find out about.

If you've never heard Dead Can Dance go to http://www.seeqpod.com/music/ and search for Dead Can Dance, or check out some of their videos and live performances on YouTube.

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Andrew J McKiernan

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