Gonna keep try to keep this update short(ish), starting with the notably bad news first:
My 9-to-5 job is going through layoffs right now, and although I'm likely safe for the time being, it's still awful to see hardworking coworkers in critical positions get axed for reasons entirely outside of their control. It also seems doubtful that this will be the only round of layoffs, so I think a lot of folks in support roles like myself are waiting for the other shoe to drop, either later this year or sometime in 2024.
Stress has been high for months now, and morale is – at least from where I'm sitting – pretty damn low. I've been laid off once before at an IT service job back in Illinois, and while that definitely sucked, my circumstances at the time were atypical: one of my coworkers there wound up moving out of state shortly after the layoffs happened, which opened up a spot on my former team and led to my being recalled after just a few months. I also had extensive family support in that area, so I could have always moved back in with either of my parents if my employment situation hadn't stabilized.
In contrast, I'm starting to understand the "survivor's guilt" that gets used to describe how remaining employees feel after a layoff or similarly destructive reorganization happens. I definitely don't mean to draw any direct 1:1 equivalencies here, since actually being laid off or effectively forced into early retirement is orders of magnitude worse than just feeling bad about it happening to someone else, but this is honestly making me reconsider my own career choices more seriously. Pay in the public sector isn't great, but it was at least supposed to be safe.
My original hope was to move back into local IT support work – think Help Desk and Computer/User support-type stuff – since I genuinely enjoy helping people with their tech troubles, and I felt like that would have been the perfect foundation for me in the long-term: do fun nerd-support stuff during the day, write at night, continue chipping away at my self-publishing projects, and maybe one day be able to do the writing thing full-time. However, after a few years of failing to break back into the professional IT space with my current employer, it's clearly not going to happen. We're in a very rural area, too, so technical job prospects in the larger community are mostly nonexistent.
This obviously isn't how I hoped things would turn out, but definitive bad news at least forces me to move on from the fuzzy maybes and professional half-measures that have thus far dominated my career (such as it is) and commit more seriously to the labor of my writing and everything that entails. I don't think that will make the road any easier to travel, but it at least means I can stop spending my professional development time on skills that aren't central to writing or otherwise managing my tiny corner of the self-publishing space. So I've pivoted away from IT work entirely and am refocusing exclusively on my fiction. If I want to have any serious hope of pulling off this whole self-pub author thing, then I need to be a lot smarter about how I spend my free time. Full stop. The mental bandwidth needed to do any serious writing or editing work after-hours is already in short supply for me, so I need to stop wasting those precious minutes on peripheral shit and other distractions.
I don't want to take my day job for granted, but I also don't want to pretend that assorted purchasing, contract-writing, and administrative support work is especially meaningful or gratifying to me personally. It's not. That's all stuff I *can* do, but not what I *want* to do. This dissonance is easier to ignore when I'm doing things that are at least adjacent to things I love – writing, first and foremost, but also developing documentation and training resources, organizing things, or technical support more clearly and directly related to furthering our larger mission – but that also feels like an increasingly threadbare justification. I owe it to myself and PROTH to find a way to do work that is both personally meaningful and lets me keep contributing to the household at the same time.
This is hardly deep or mind-blowing stuff, but it's a lesson I'm working much harder to internalize. It has been very easy for me to slip into the role of the unremarkable, reactive, and frustratingly passive protagonist these past few years, so I've been trying to un-fuck the habits and rituals that comprise my daily life and turn them into guard rails, inducements, and other feedback loops that actively support my writing. And critically, it's been working. SH#1 is undergoing its final reread and edits, I've resumed more serious development work for RW, and I increasingly find myself *wanting* to write before I game, read, or otherwise blow off steam at the end of the day. I doubt the battle against authorial entropy will ever be truly won, but for now it feels good to be productive again and have supports in place to ensure that continues.
My newest strategy on that front has been the app and service called Clockify. I've only used their free version so far, but it's enabled me to divide up various writing projects into proper categories and easily track my time spent on each of them (RW vs. SH, research vs. drafting vs. editing, etc.). It even generates an email report to me each week, showing what projects I've worked on, when, and for how long. This helps me track progress over time and gives me a clear indication of whether or not I'm meeting my general writing or project-specific goals, all without needing to reinvent the tracking wheel myself. Seeing those writing numbers stay up (or go higher!) is very motivating, but even if I have a slower week, it helps me keep things in perspective and avoid regressing into negative self-talk loops. Clockify has also fully displaced my use of Habitica, which had (ironically) become too distracting to use on a daily basis with its character building and level progression systems. My gamer tendencies meant that I started engaging more with its hokey mini-games than the actual tasks it was meant to help me stay on top of.
In other better news, I'm stoked for the coming release of the twelfth and final book in the Cradle series, Waybound, by Will Wight. I love that series with the power of ten thousand suns. Plus, he is kind of my self-publishing hero at this point, so seeing such an impactful and consistently compelling story conclude after *twelve freaking volumes* is a level of skill and artistry and diligence that gives me something to aim for.
I'm also super excited for the return of the TV series Warrior, which had two incredible first seasons, and the new SILO TV series. Hugh Howey's SILO books were incredibly formative for me, so I'm hoping that they're done justice on Apple TV+ or whatever the platform is called (streaming acronyms and brand names are getting harder to track).
I'll try to share updates on my personal RW wiki one of these days; ditto some version of that "Modern Mythology" post I keep half-finishing, shelving, and then forgetting about until I invariably consume superhero media again, but I'm gonna call it for now and leave you with this snappy distillation that I saw on Reddit yesterday:
'Doing Nothing at All' vs. 'Making Small Consistent Efforts':
(1.00)365 = 1.00
(1.01)365 = 37.70