Monday, November 9, 2009

Halloween is for Kids. So get your 6-foot ass off my porch.

This will be short. And I really debated whether to post anything...I haven't in months, simply because nothing new was pissing me off enough or making me say "hmmm" enough to feel compelled to blog. But I've been thinking on this...and dwelling. So here goes:

It's Halloween. If you are over 18, get the hell off my porch. If you are escorting your kids because they are too little to roam around themselves, you can come on my porch but if you have the balls to hold out your own bag, I will kick your ass off my porch. If you do not speak English, are an adult and come up to my porch spouting enough English to ask for candy, I will still kick your ass off of it.

Even if you are escorting your kid, and you're a teenage mother, forget it. And wearing that skintight, ass-baring orange Jailbird outfit from "The Girls Next Door" is not helping. If you are going to a semi-pornographic adults-only party later, make a wise choice and change after taking the wee ones through the neighborhood. Get off my porch.

Monday, July 27, 2009

Little Lost Black Boy

I went to the mall yesterday. On the way in, I spotted a little boy standing by the fire lane sign. He was little, black (and yes, there is a reason I point this out, so bear with me) and he was all alone. I asked him if his mom or dad was nearby...he said he was mad at his dad.

I told him we'd go find his dad together, that he shouldn't be outside at the mall all by himself. He didn't want to go in and I thought for minute that maybe his parents were right inside the door. I went over a peeked in...no such luck. But in the meantime, two black women walked up to the little boy and started talking to him.

One of the women immediately started talking at him, almost like she was mad at him. (He's four, keep in mind.) She told him he needed to come inside and if he didn't, the police would come along and take him and he would never see his dad again. Yes, let me repeat that. This black woman told this little black boy that the police would come and take him and he would never see his dad again.

I was amazed that she would say something like that to a small child. And then I thought this is part of the reason why black men grow up viewing the police as the enemy... don't go to the police, they will keep you away from the ones you love. They are not there to help, they are there to hurt. Don't snitch; the police will find some reason to haul you in.

And before you go getting all righteous on me, yes...I understand why black men are suspicious of the police. There have been too many incidents for them to not be wary. But this was a four-year-old boy. And if, God forbid, someone hadn't come along and helped him find his dad (and it was a happy reunion, by the way), I hate to think he wouldn't ask someone in uniform because of the fear this woman tried to instill in him.

Friday, July 10, 2009

Forced Vacation: You will have fun, dammit!

I haven't blogged in a while. I was boring myself, let alone the five people who read this. But I've decided to force my 16 year old son and daughter to go on vacation with their parents and thought I'd briefly jot down the reasons why.

As my kids get older, they get more independent, which is a good thing. Really, it is. (If I keep telling myself that, eventually I'll believe it.) But I also feel increasingly out of touch with both of them.

My son has a job -- he's getting cash under the table from a recreational sports league -- but I have no idea how much. And yes, it is my business. I need to know so I can gage how much less I have to dole out for gas and other expenses. I think he recently had a girlfriend...but I'm not really sure if it was a real relationship or one conducted solely via text messaging. He leaves at 7 in the morning and comes home at 10 at night...and I know where he is all day, but how was his day? What did he do? Did he enjoy coaching the kids? Who shows promise? Who's being a little stinker? I just want to have a conversation with him that doesn't involve money, pizza or car repair.

My daughter is, depending on the day, sullen and secretive, or loving and effusive. It's a crap shoot when I'm going to get which girl on which day. I'd like one long block of time where maybe I can start to recognize the signs when she turns from Jeckell into Hyde.

So off we go to forced togetherness up North. We will float down innertubes on the Platte and climb the sand dunes and go see a move at the Cherry Bowl Drive-In. And I know, even though they will never admit it, that fun will be had.

No, you cannot bring a friend along.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Drapery Tassel Bling

I'm at that age where a lot of my friends' children are graduating from high school. My son is 16; he's got a couple of years to go. But I have decided one thing: when he graduates, he will wear some drapery tassel bling, dammit.

I was struck by the extremes when I was browsing graduation photos on friends' facebook photo albums. Group pictures were the most telling: a group of friends standing in a row, all in their caps and gowns but a couple of the kids had tassels and some had none. Some had purple and white and gold, some just a purple...what does it all mean? Honor society, French honor society, cumulative GPA of 3.9 or higher...I'm sure there are many others, in rainbows around their necks.

My kids are smart...but neither one of them is going to be valedictorian (nor would I want them to be...being valedictorian these days means you've basically got about two years of college under your belt when you graduate, resulting in a 4.5 GPA...I really do want my kids to enjoy high school.) But I want them to stand out from the crowd when they walk with the 800 other kids in their graduating classes...and that means they gotta get some bling.

Is there bling for social life? My daughter might have a shot at that one.

Monday, May 18, 2009

My Life in .25

I realize, as I write this, that I've been keeping track of my time in 15 minute increments for more than 20 years. That lovely .25 -- it gets a little old when you figure there's 32 of those .25s in a day.

But what all that time keeping has done for me is make me value my time...even when I'm not at work. Before I put that sod in or paint, or take the time to run around town to comparison shop, I think about what it will cost...in human time. My time. And more often than not, that human time factor and its related cost points me in a different direction. I either hire it out, find a better way to do it or just don't do it at all. I definitely think about ROI when I decide to expend some time and energy.

Time. It's the only commodity I truly own outright.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

My Twitter Honeymoon is Over.

When I first started playing around with Twitter, it was fun. All these people, communicating in real time, finding interesting articles, weighing in with opinions, making pithy comments and wry observations.

But alas. All good things must come to an end. First, there was the onslaught of the multi-level marketers. I figured out how to avoid them (if you have more than a few thousand followers, you are either a vapid celebrity -- Hey, Oprah! - or all you are interested in is ramping up your twitter stats. That's fine, but either way, you won't miss me if I don't follow you back.)

Then there are the self-absorbed twitteraholics. They never reply to anyone. And they spew out twits -- mostly retweets from genuinely intelligent, helpful twitterers -- every five seconds. Seriously, if you can twit every five seconds all day (and sometimes all night) long, you are an unemployed loser who lives in his mother's basement. Ergo=who cares what you think.

My favorites are the ones who merely retweet others twits then add 10 hash tags. The ultimate is when they are arguing a point with you, can't substantiate their opinion, get frustrated, then tweet the ubiquitious #fail. Apparently on twitter, "# fail" is the pinnacle of debate skill.

I envisioned twitter as a two-way street. Short, direct conversations punctuated with helpful bits of information. With some humor strewn about. Some of the best twitterers are congresspeople and news anchors. Some of the worst? The self-proclaimed twitter "experts."

Some days, the fail whale is a welcome sight.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Sometimes Age just gets up and Slaps You in the Face.

This blogging stuff is sending me over the edge. Now that I created one, I feel the need...obligation...pressure...to populate it on a regular basis. Regular, to me, means at least every few days. I don't have enough original thoughts in my head to blog daily. (Neither do most people, but that doesn't stop them.)

Today it's about my ambivalence about getting older. I'm heading into my late 40s this year, and I have to admit, I don't like the sound of that. I used to say I would never have cosmetic surgery...please, now I'm trying to figure out how to save up for botox and laser hair removal...at the very LEAST. On the other hand, chances are I won't be getting pregnant at my age!

Chuck (he's the ex husband I'm dating, and I'll blog about that eventually, but it's still playing itself out) and I had a moment of clarity the other day when we were looking for concerts to go to over the summer and we realized the bands we would like to see are either swilling prune juice in an old folks home or they are DEAD.

I talk to my folks every couple of weeks...Dad is 80, Mom is 78...and they are fixated on their health problems. To the absolute exclusion of anything else. I do wonder sometimes if they remember they have grandchildren.

I truly hope I never get that way. I have visions of being a sassy old lady who still drops the F bomb occasionally.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Not the Write Stuff.

My children are terrible writers. Really, truly. Oh, they can write a quick, down and dirty paper for school. But an essay with a point of view? A creative writing assignment that is supposed to take you to another place and time? A poem? A haiku, for pete's sake? No. Just...no.

I guess I shouldn't be suprised. When I ask my son where he's going, he says "places." When I ask him with who, he says "people." When I ask him what he'll be doing at those places with people, he says "stuff." I know, part of it is a "back off, you're prying," message to Mom. But the other part is that he's just too lazy for good, old fashioned conversation.

That's the boy. Now, the girl...she is full of drama. The facial expressions and the tone of voice I am subjected to on a regular basis are the stuff of Lifetime Television for Women. But when it comes to translating this to a piece of paper...total deer in headlights.

MEAP testing (which I despise, but it does point out areas needing drastic improvement in the school system) indicates my kids' school system is piss-poor when it comes to teaching solid writing skills. My experience with their homework proves this true. But they've also forgotten how to converse in colorful language...too much texting, too much IDK, LOL. I read that the average vocabulary in 1950 for a teenager was 25,000 words. Today...more like 10,000.

Not surprised.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Scary Water Cooler Talk at Hospitals

I was carted off the hospital the other day from work (I won't bore you with the details, and I'm fine, but there's nothing like getting hauled away in an ambulance with chest pains to ramp up the stress level at work!), and while I was waiting on a gurney for a room in the ER, I couldn't help but eavesdrop on the nurses chatting behind the desk.

Normally, water cooler chat is harmless...or at the most, petty and spiteful. This talk, however, was enough to induce a heart attack if you didn't already come in with that problem. I heard how over worked they were, how stupid some of the doctors were, how George doesn't know what he's doing half the time, and Lisa is hungover, and that policy just causes people to get infections...well, you get the drift here.

The only point to this blog post? When you are in charge of caring for the public--in whatever capacity that might be such as nurse, doctor, day care worker, social worker, therapist--your idle chatter about your job might be scaring the hell out of some of us.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Pardon my Previous Parental Smugness

I'm not a bad parent. But I'm also not as good as I used to think I was. My daughter is doing poorly in two subjects (language arts, which just kills me, and science, which kills her dad, an engineer). She is mouthy, disrespectful, beligerant and moody; most of the time I don't enjoy her company. (She can also be extremely funny, sweet, and fabulously creative.) But what the past school year has taught me is that all those years of being judgemental of other parents with mouthy, disrespectul children was just setting me up for payback: big time.

Everyone has their moments as parents when everything just clicks. But the middle school years? Well, the clicking is silent most of the time. There's weeping, wailing and much gnashing of teeth. But the moments when the sun is shining, the kids are happy and mom and dad are at peace with the universe...hmmm...I'll have to get back to you. And I am SO guilty of thinking smugly to myself, in years past, "oh, I'll never let my child talk to me that way." Or, "I don't know what's so hard about it...it just requires a little discipline." Or the worst, "What is wrong with her (him)? Being a parent isn't brain surgery."

No. It's much harder than that.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

It's Lunchtime! Go Home!

I've been meaning to rant about this for a while...and a lunchtime stop at my favorite store prompted me to get on the stick and do it. Here goes:

Housewives, Stay-at-home moms, old retired people, people who have the day off...stay the hell out of stores during lunchtime!!!!! (yes, it warranted 5 exclamation points)

Mommies dearest, I know you miss the comraderie of adults and conversation that doesn't include the words poo poo and sippy cup, but that's just tough. When you drag your crabby brat through the produce section it disturbs my ability to pick out a good head of broccoli. And, more importantly, YOU DON'T NEED TO BE THERE AT THAT TIME. You can go in the morning, in the mid morning, in the mid afternoon...well, you get my drift. So if you really want adult company, put your kid in daycare and get your ass to work.

Old retired people, you are just the worst. Not only do you walk too slow and hog the entire aisle, you want to engage every freaking salesperson, meat counter guy and stock boy in tedious, boring conversation. I don't care that you eat prunes to stay regular and neither does Joe...what Joe needs to care about is slicing my turkey paper thin so I can get back to work!

People who have the day off and still can't find anything better to do than go shopping when the rest of the working world is trying to knock one more thing off their list: you're just too pathetic for words. Go back to work, leisure time is wasted on you.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

My Upcoming Southeast Michigan Staycation.

At my company, once you hit that 20-year milestone, you get a four week sabbatical. I hit that mark this July. And wouldn't you figure, now that I have the time, I don't have the money to go anywhere.

So I guess I'm taking a "staycation." Stupid name, but it fits. I live in Detroit (well, a suburb of, but a close suburb, so cut me some slack.) so there are lots of things to do, and lord knows the city needs my money. Kwame stole or spent or wasted a LOT of it over the past several years.

I'm going to head to the DIA (haven't been there since its fabulous renovation), the Detroit Historical Museum, the Detroit Science Center, Pewabic Pottery, the usual suspects. I used to live in Midtown, near the Fisher Building (which is a cool place to visit and shop, too), so Detroit is not a foreign, scary place to me (except when you have to go grocery shopping...homeless people in grocery stores have no concept of personal space). Sometimes it's fun just to drive through Indian Village--I would love to live in one of those old mansions, but the heating bills alone would put me in the poorhouse.

Not sure if Fort Wayne is still open; I'll check. Grosse Isle already has all the wealthy downriver rats; no need to go there right now. But Trenton's Elizabeth Park is really beautiful, so I'll meander over there for a spell. They have a brand new skate park (it's for trick skating, I will NOT be doing that) and on weekends, pony rides. And the Romulus Athletic Center is a really nice place to work out--lots of stone and glass and earthtones, with state of the art equipment and a fabulous poolscape and rock climbing wall.

But I will also wander south to Toledo, (I know, it's Ohio, but they're hurting, too) to see the school bus races at the Toledo Speedway, and perhaps the trailer races at Flatrock Speedway, too. I hear great things about the Libbey Glass outlet and I haven't been to COSI since my kids were little. (I guess that will have to wait...when I went to hyperlink this, I realized it was closed due to restructuring and will open in Fall 2009...maybe. Sigh.)

Cabela's is doing fine without me and my money, but downtown Monroe (home of the River Raisin battlefield, no less!) could probably use a little cash infusion. And my hometown, Dearborn, does have a wonderful theater...granted the entertainment is strictly D list, but sometimes it's campy fun. And the nature trail that starts at Andiamo's and heads into Hines Park past Henry Ford's Fairlane Estate is my favorite running route...I've come upon deer and that's really cool.

Just writing this has made me feel better about living in Michigan and I didn't even mention the Great Lakes.

Be proud, Michiganders!

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Keep Your Butts out of my Neighborhood!

An open letter to the hospital a block away from my house: thanks so much for instituting that wonderful "no smoking on hospital grounds" policy. It's a really nice PR soundbite you can put in all your marketing materials.

But let me tell you this: while you are all sitting smugly in your offices, enjoying the fresh air and the self-righteousness of your actions, we homeowners who surround your glorious institution now have to constantly pick up cigarette butts off of our front laws. Why? Because that's where your nicotine-stained doctors and nurses saunter when they have to have that cancer stick fix.

I feel most sorry for the few houses that sit directly adjacent to the property line. Their sidewalks and lawns are packed full of butts. It's a lovely site. Almost as lovely as when a pack of your vaulted medical personnel stand around in a tight pack and slowly kill themselves, then cavalierly flick their butts onto someone else's property. Truly altruistic.

Butt out.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Hiring People for all the Wrong Reasons.

We have a job opening at our company...weird, I know. But since we laid off about a dozen people in late January, we've had a few others leave on their own, and now we are a bit short handed.

It's for a lower level media relations position...we'd like someone who is energetic, aggressive, media savvy--they're going to be spending a lot of time crafting angles and making fevered pitch calls and emails to get coverage for our clients. But we also need someone who understands the role of social media in public relations.

The resumes we are getting are incredible. People with 25+ years of experience, who have been the top dog at newspapers and charitable foundations and ad agencies are now applying for this job...the king of job they had back in the 80s, most likely. Let's face it, they need the health insurance and a regular paycheck. It's a humbling experience for them and a gratitude-inducing one for us...we are awfully glad to be on the hiring end if this is what it's come to.

The problem? Wanting to hire a ridiculously overqualified person for cheap...and that's not a good thing. Let's face it, the minute the economy perks up, that guy or gal is out of here. Or wanting to be promoted, or paid a boatload more money. And while there's nothing wrong with that, it means all of this effort was a waste.

It's just awfully hard to say no to these people.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Are you the Wife at Work?

Here's what I'm talking about...I'm in a meeting with 5 or 6 other people...all men. We are brainstorming about a new client or a new project...who is the ONLY one taking notes...yep, that would be me. At the end of the meeting, it's decided we need a presentation. Or a powerpoint show. Or an excel spread sheet. Whatever is needed, WHY DOES EVERYONE LOOK AT ME?

Are you constantly following up with people to make sure they are meeting their deadlines? When there's a big meeting, do you have to go around and round up your colleagues? Do you always have to set up the screen, and the computer and run the powerpoint show?

If you do, you're the work wife.

(Early in my career, I was working at EDS and went to a meeting with two guys...one of whom asked me if I knew shorthand. I DID, but I wasn't going to tell him that!)

Monday, March 16, 2009

The Stages of Job Loss

I'm lucky. I still have my job. I spent some time over the weekend with a friend who has lost his (I hate the word, "lost." It sounds like you merely misplaced your job...it will show up any minute now.) He was fired. Let's call it like it is.

He worked at this company for 25 years. And understandably, he's having a hard time accepting it. He's still in the denial stage--I forget if that's the first stage or the second, but he is convinced the department he left behind will crumble without him. And it won't. Oh, there might be some missteps and some fumbling around, and a missed deadline or two...but nothing earth-shattering. And eventually, some of his former co-workers might even like the situation better now that he's gone. After all, no one is unconditionally loved (not at work, anyway).

He is convinced the woman who fired him is an idiot and will crash and burn in a spectacular manner. He will watch for it for a while and then, when the next stage of job loss sets in, he will stop looking backward and begin to prepare for his future. That's when he'll finally get a new job.

I think the hardest part about losing your job is when you realize people stopped missing you shortly after you walked out the door. Not because they didn't like or respect you. But because in this economy, everyone is doing less with more and jobs are scarce and people know you have to keep your head down and just plow ahead. But thinking about the ones who are gone just reminds you that you are one of the lucky ones left.

No time for regret.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Social Gaffes...What's OK to Say?

Just curious. Can you tell someone they have spinach in their front tooth? How about a booger in the nose? Zipper down? Pantyhose tucked in the underwear? Bra strap showing? How about if the thong strap is showing? I know you can tell your friends these things. But what about a business colleague? What about a client?

If you get an email with embarassing typos from your boss, and you know he sent it to a client or media person, do you speak up? I guess if you think he's an ass, you let it go...but will he get mad later when he realizes it and knows you didn't tell him?

Then there's the more delicate situations...what if someone who works with you has a horrible squeeky voice? Or an annoying habit of saying "like" every third word? Or has putrefying body odor? Or breath that smells like a newly opened crypt?

These aren't uncommon circumstances; I have encountered each and every one of these scenarios. So, for the record, here's how I handled:

Spinach--yes to friend, no to client

Booger--nope

Zipper-nope

Pantyhose-yes to both friend and client

Bra strap-no

Thong strap-yes, but only to person who reported to me

Email-yes (because I am known as a good proofreader and he'd know I saw it and chose to say nothing)

Squeeky voice-yes, only to the person who worked for me; got them speaker training (it didn't work, BTW)

Like-yes, colleague (again, to no avail...this person is over 40 but speaks like a teenage valley girl)

Body odor-lobbed that one over to HR (hey, that's what they're there for)

Breath-nope

Monday, March 9, 2009

A Silver Lining in this Economic Meltdown

Read in the NY Times that more men are being laid off during these tough times. Not that it translates into any more housework being done by those laid-off slackers, but there might be a silver lining in this jettisoning of the MAWGs (my nickname for middle-aged white guys).

Let's face it...women haven't made the same salaries as men in...let's see...FOREVER. This article from 2007 indicates it will take 47 years to achieve pay parity between men and women...but that was written before the country plummeted into a recession. I'm thinking we can move that 47-year timeline up. You want to get rid of your higher paid workers but leave staff in place who do the same thing? You're going to dump the men.

And in the long run, this might mean that when this economy turns around, companies might fix that anal/cranial inversion and realize that you don't need to pay men more. Don't pay them less--I'm not advocating that--but more pay for the same job just might not fly in the near future.

Jobless rates of 8 plus percent (11 percent in Michigan, where I'm from) are a painful way to get to pay parity.

Friday, March 6, 2009

I am Between Booms.

I was born in 1964. Which means that I'm a baby boomer... but on the very tail end. So I suffer from psychographic and demographic schizophrenia.

I'm fiscally conservative but socially liberal. I voted for Obama, but follow John McCain on Twitter. I think Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity are media whores who do nothing but bitch about the stimulus bill, but I really am appalled by all the pork that's stuffed into it.

And I am constantly annoyed by the self-centered Gen Xers who work for me...but secretly envy their "of course the world revolves around me. Why shouldn't it?" attitude.

I do think all this tweeting, blogging and facebooking is just another way of saying to the world that every moment of your life is worth recording and sharing with total strangers.

But I tweet, blog and facebook.

Torn.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Linkedin? More like Suckered in.

Is anyone else out there just so over the whole Linkedin model? I have come to the conclusion that it is chock full of business people who are too cheap to hire professional help and want advice (and sometimes actual work) for free.

Either that or freelancers who are constantly shilling for business, help with getting the word out about their new ventures or asking for help in areas they actually want to be paid as a professional for. (Free advice: if you are a freelance writer, posting on Linkedin with run-on sentences, typos and generally crappy grammer is NOT going to get you clients. Yes, I see this all the time.)

If you are launching a new website, are you asking people to read your press releases and give you professional advice on the content and the distribution? You aren't ready to launch a new website, cheapass. Pay for some solid PR and marketing help first.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Bankrupt Companies need Marketing Love, too.

Saw an article in the WSJ today...bankruptcy lawyers are doing a booming business. And law firms are having a hard time hanging on to their top dogs. Nice problem to have, if you are a lawyer. But what frustrates me is that companies going into bankruptcy--if they are planning on restructuring and coming back out again--will pay top dollar for legal counsel, financial assistance, banking help...the list goes on and on. But almost none of these companies thinks about hiring a marketing and public relations company.

I admit, that's my business, so I'm a bit biased as to the value of good marketing and pr help. But what good does it do if during the months-(and sometimes years-) long process of going in and out of bankruptcy, you lose focus on communicating with your customers, employees, suppliers and the media? So many companies cut the marketing budget...and sometimes the entire department...when bankruptcy looms. But this is the exact opposite of what a company should do.

Market share erodes when you are not in the public eye. The media speculates you are merely selling off assets and offloading debt. Your suppliers lose faith in your ability to bounce back if you go dark on them. Employees who hear nothing but crickets begin to look for other, more viable employement options if a company can't provide updates and a timeline for emerging from the bankruptcy.

What's left to build your new company on?

Upspeak? Does it really make women sound stupid? Yes?

There are a lot of teenagers who have this annoying speech tic...but I notice it among women at work quite frequently. Everything is a question. I must admit, I have no tolerance for this. Either you are confident in what you are saying, or you have a legitimate question. Couching one as the other defeats your purpose.

Women also use far too much wishy washy talk...stop saying "I think it might..." before you introduce an opinion at a meeting. Just say "It is..." or "It will be..." putting all those namby pamby qualifiers in front of your opinion just makes people dismiss it out of hand.

And stop populating your emails with the same sort of verbiage. Useless. Get to the point.

Ok?

Electronic Familiarity Breeds Contempt.

Let me preface this by stating, Yes. Yes, I do read my son's text messages from time to time. He is 16, he lives under my roof and his cell phone is on his father's plan. I will not apologize for this, ACLU.

But what I have noticed is that teenagers (and pre-teens, too...yes, I read my 12-year-old daughter's text messages occasionally) say things via texting that they would NEVER say to each other face-to-face. The messages reflect a degree of intimacy that is pretty risque, even by today's standards.

When my son was 15, he had a short-lived relationship...he used to wax poetic about his girlfriend's hips, tell her he was there for her when she was feeling down...he was downright eloquent at times...and sometimes I wanted to slap him for his cheeky comments. When I brought this up to him (without revealing I had read his phone) he fought me on it for a minute...then probably thought about some of his recent texts and finally agreed.

If I had to guess from just reading his text messages, I would have made the assumption that he had already gotten pretty far with this girl. Not 100% sure, but I don't think they did much more than kiss.

People also say things to each other via email that they would never have the balls to say to their face. Especially at work. The emails are usually not sexual in nature, but they can be terse, condescending and downright rude at times. It's much harder to be snotty when you are looking someone in the eye. I'm constantly telling people to stop typing, get up from their desk, walk over and TALK to the person. It stops so much of the petty back and forth that email seems to foster.

LOL.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Saturday Night in Downtown Detroit-DEAD

Went to the boat show in Detroit over the weekend...granted, it was snowy all day, but not that snowy. And it stopped by about 4pm. But the boat show? Dead. So quiet and empty it was kinda weird. This is Saturday night. And I know no one has any money for a new boat, (although I was only in Cobo for two hours and they rang the sales bell 3 times while I was there), usually you can muster up a decent number of window shoppers.

And there were some good deals...apparently the attendance was down by 8% (frankly, it was down by about 98% on Saturday night) but sales were up, according to Great Lakes Boating.

But after that, we went to Greektown. And that was dead, too. We ate at the Laikon cafe...great food (but an annoying lack of designated smoking/non smoking areas...if you go, make sure you tell them you don't want to sit RIGHT NEXT to smokers) but also dead.

A large group did come in, getting the waiter all excited, but once they sat down and realized "you can't read anything on the menu!" they all got up and left. Save us from roaming rednecks who lose their bearings on the way to the casino.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Teenage Driver's Ed

My teenage son has made me a better driver. (Well, I always said I was a good driver in a bad way. I think I have good driving skills but I drive too fast.) I now come to a complete stop at every stop sign. Which means I driver slower down residential streets, because who needs the whiplash?

I pay attention to the speed limit because how can I expect him to do the same when he's alone if I don't set a good example for him when I'm driving? But it's HARD....and it made me realize just how bad my driving had gotten. Did you know you're supposed to be able to see the tires of the vehicle in front of you when you stop? And you remember the two second follow rule on the freeway, right? Don't forget to turn left into the left lane...well, better give yourself a refresher here.

There are some real horses' ass drivers on the road these days and while I have a lot of confidence in my son, I don't have confidence in those OTHER drivers. And driver's ed, while better than nothing, doesn't even begin to prepare your kid for the real world.

But I love sending him to the store for milk!

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Anywhere but Detroit

The braintrust at the Detroit Metro Visitors and Convention Bureau is at it again. Remember, this is the same group of wackjobs who hired a outstate company (can't remember who) to design its new logo and tagline. Then adding insult to injury, they hired a firm out of San Francisco to do research on the city and how it's perceived. Now they've hired an agency out of St. Louis to drum up film making business in the Big D (yeah, it will be run out of Fleishman Hillard's Los Angeles office...like there aren't any companies here who have a presence in LA).


This is the same group that is trying to promote a Detroit. Make it Here. mentality. Yeah, right. Not like there aren't dozens, if not hundreds, of qualified companies who could do the job. I can just hear the typical, LA-based sales pitch..."yeah, dark, run down warehouse...you don't even need to hire extras to play the homeless folk and the crack whores...they LIVE there, man! Totally serious...broken windows, grafitti, sure, got all that. You need what? Perp walk in city hall...we got b-roll for that already...no need to shoot!"

No one based in LA will be promoting the DIA, the river walk, Indian Village, Belle Isle...well, you get the picture.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Do we all have to be on a diet?

Let me say this first: as a former fatty (I lost 50 pounds going on 4 years ago) I totally understand the need to watch what you eat: portion size, fat content, fiber grams, etc. But now it seems like the fat police are everywhere...now that New York City is required to post calorie counts in all of its restaurants, it follows that the rest of the country will not be far behind.

How long before your waiter starts recommending healthier alternatives..."Really, Ma'am? The fries? Why not a side of steamed broccoli? Do you know how many fat grams are in that basil cream sauce?"

When I made the decision to lose weight, I knew I had to be the one with the willpower and the knowledge to make the right choices. Otherwise, it would never stay off. But now that I've been at this weight for a few years, I enjoy the dining out experience...it's one of the few times a month I don't study labels for fat, protein and fiber content. I sort of know what to avoid...I don't order alfredo sauce or fried meat or mountains of cheese. But conversely, I don't want to start a running total of calories...which is what we all will do when the menu slaps you across the face with it.

Will your receipt have two totals now? One for $$, the other for calories consumed?

Friday, February 13, 2009

You've got Mail...at 9 pm!

I went for a run last night...it was late because I was at my son's basketball game until about 8:00. I'm just jogging along the sidewalk, listening to the Killers, when out of the corner of my eye, I spot a white van driving really slow next to me. Then the flashlight comes out and bounces all over the house in front of me. First, I thought it was the pizza delivery guy. But then I see the eagle decal on the door...and I realize it's the mailman. Or in this case, the mailwoman.

O.k. by this time, it's going on 9 p.m. What is she doing? Did she fool around all day at the mall, and now she's REALLY behind? Did she find some stuff wedged between the door and the seat and because she's incredibly dedicated, she's coming back at night to finish the job?

She's got a friend in the van with her...is that legal? Did she tell her friend, "look, I am so screwed. I went to the matinee today and lost all track of time. I have to get this stuff delivered by midnight tonight or it's curtains for me, so I'll buy you pizza and beer if you just help me with the mail!"

I mean, I trust my mailman, but it kind of creeps me out to think of him (or her) slinking around the neighborhood in the dark.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Proven Right...Was it Worth It?

You all know people like this at work -- they insist on getting the last word in because it's so important for them to be RIGHT.

I have actually been in meetings where my colleagues have thrown their own clients under the bus because to keep quiet meant they wouldn't get that last RIGHT word in.

I also have sat through really painful year-end evaluations (one of them was over 3 hours long) because every bit of constructive criticism I offered up had to be countered with a lengthy diatribe of why I was wrong...they DID do that, or that WAS accomplished. Don't people realize that just reinforces my opinion that you are an arrogant, inflexible tool...and I automatically make the assumption that you are that way with your clients, too?

Arrrggghhh.

Sometimes, it's best to just know in your heart you're right and let history tell the tale.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Over my head in Overhead

What is an acceptable level of overhead? For charities and non profit organizations, most people cite a "no more than 25%" figure that has gained acceptance over the past several years, although some will argue that figure is restrictive and counter productive.

The overhead percentage at my company -- simply figured as number of non billable folks out of the total headcount -- is about 24%. But we're not a non profit...not theoretically, anyway. We have 9 IT folks--that's 1 IT person for every 7 billable staff people. This means I shouldn't even have to turn my own computer on in the morning.

My colleague's brother used to head up HR for Kowalski...the sausage people. He was a one-man band, responsible for the personnel issues of more than 350 people. Including little old Polish ladies who didn't want to work with their neighbors who didn't go to Catholic Church (true story). We have 3 HR people but for the most part, we ignore each other's religious convictions.

When times are flush, overhead isn't watched as carefully. There's more than enough profit to go around. But speaking for myself -- no raise in 2 years, a salary cut this year and 25 billable staff laid off in the last 2 years -- something's gotta give.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Boy's Club

I work in the auto industry. Not for one of the big 3 (or 6, or 2, or whatever it is these days...) but our clients are primarily automotive. And the good ol' boys club is still alive and well and as times get tougher...the boys club grows stronger.

Google "influential women in the automotive industry" and you get "Ask Patty." Not that there's anything wrong with Patty, but a chatty blog on car buying advice is now the zenith of automotive career success?

Thousands of high ranking women have left the automotive industry over the past several years and for an industry that sells 65% of its products to women (and they influence as much as 80% of all vehicle purchases) this is like putting a woman at the helm of Playboy magazine. (wait, that actually worked out pretty well, didn't it?)

At my company, if you are not a "car guy" (that's a literal term that's used all the time) you are not afforded the same respect. Oh, if you need an event planned or a contest or incentive trip organized, of course...call the women! But if you want to discuss marketing a new vehicle or launching a new car company...well, that's where the boys are.

Friday, February 6, 2009

Roller Derby Girl

My friend Wendy is amazing. She decided, at the ripe ol' age of 42, to join the Detroit Derby Girls and become a jamming, blocking chick on skates.

She's a member of the Detroit Pistoffs. http://http://www.detroitderbygirls.com
Her Derby name is Lottie Guts. She rolls with teammates Cookie Rumble, Elle McFearsome and Maim West. The play on names is one of the most entertaining things about this league. (Well, that and the giant beers for sale at the bouts.)

She tried out for the Drew Barrymore Roller Derby movie. http://http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1172233/She didn't end up in the movie (she would have had to take too much time off work) but Drew did ask her how she got her arms so buff.

Wendy is in the best shape of her life. But right before her big Derby debut, she went to public skate to practice some of her moves and fell and broke her leg. Bad. Surgery, pins, the works. That was November. January, she was back out there, no fear.

My Derby name would be Hell-No Kitty.

But don't hold your breath.

Roll, Wendy, Roll!

My Childhood, Redux.

I try to relive my childhood through my own kids. Especially my daughter.

Figure skating? I REALLY encouraged it because I was a Dorothy Hamill wanna be who never got to take lessons. She quit before mastering the dreaded axel jump (where most kids drop out, according to her coach.)

Dress wool coat with velvet collar, cuffs and the matching muff? She hated it. I secretly wished they made it in my size. (I still peruse this catalog wistfully.)

Baby doll bed with ruffled canopy? The cat loved it. Baby doll ended up stuffed in a drawer.

My son has escaped most of my youthful musings, but he did get a '92 Cadillac Eldorado to drive when he turned 16.

Because I never did.

Musings on Frozen People.

Here in Michigan, one would think people freeze to death left and right. The Bay City man whose power was cut off and the poor guy encased in ice in an elevator shaft of an abandoned building...it got me thinking about my neighbors.

Sweet little Polish couple across the street--would I know if their power was off for a few days? Honestly, I don't think so. I come home from work, shut the blinds and go about my business. But the reason I don't worry about them much is because their sons visit on a daily basis. Who else lives alone on my block? Do they have relatives who check on them? Or, like the man in Bay City, do they live thousands of miles away?

I will pay more attention.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Lord (Lady) of the Flies-Middle School Style

My 12-year-old daughter is a tyrant. At least, this is the picture I'm getting after discussing her lunch habits this morning. I asked her if she needed anything for lunch or, at the very least, some lunch money. She turned both down, explaining that she just goes around collecting food from others. How does that work, I wondered?



She blithely informed me that she and the other "cool" kids are given treats by the less popular 7th graders. Presumably to curry favor and to keep them from being mocked and tormented.



My child is an extortionist. Not a proud moment.

Cube Hierarchy

Today at work we moved people into different cubes. We have 12 rows of 4 cubes. They run from the main hallway back to a large bank of windows. The cubes are pinkish grey, bland and soulless.

There was much discussion about who was going to get a window. Do the senior account executives get a window? Or do just the account supervisors? But that means there will be window cubes empty...that's just wasteful!

Do we put the sneezing Ramona next to the easily startled Jessica? We only have 3 African Americans in our entire company...we better not put them all together or someone will read something into that, for sure. Amy is really messy, but Clare is a neurotic, anal retentive hun when it comes to her work space. And do we sprinkle the men throughout to cut down on the drama?

So many decisions. Get me a dartboard and a tylenol.

I fired my friend.

On her birthday. How's that for insensitive? Now, before I go any further, let me declare that I didn't know it was her birthday. My friends know I just don't keep track of that stuff. I hardly remember my kids' birthdays, let alone friends'. But apparently that's a little piece of research my HR department doesn't do before we pick d-day.

I've known my friend for 20 years. She's a dear, sweet, kind person who did a good job. We just didn't have any work for her. She's great at planning and executing big, over-the-top galas for lots of glittery, important people. But companies just aren't doing that much entertaining anymore. So she had to go.

She was sad. And so was I. And it did not make for a good birthday, I'm sure. I'm sorry. This economy has had a unwelcome side effect...I am starting to not like myself. No matter how sensitive I try to be about letting someone go, after a while, you are the ogre who fires people.