Office Drama.

Office drama has always seemed absolutely ridiculous to me. There's no point in getting up in each other's faces when the very environment separates us into our own little cubes. My goal when I work in an office is to sit in my cube, not talk to anyone, do my job, and do it well. It is not to earn appreciation from the bosses, it is not to show off my ability to learn faster than the average office citizen, it is not to have how many tasks I do a day counted and touted to the rest of the group.


So I don't really dig this tactic of group cohesiveness and competitiveness. I've been working there all of 2 weeks, and my name is topping the lists of what is done each day, and I hate it. I've gone so far as to try and slow my pace down and goof off a little in order to avoid being recognized.

Unfortunately, I cannot work slowly. I cannot work sub-par. I make mistaks, as I am human and often full of foibles. I ask a lot of questions to ensure those mistakes don't happen again, however, and they normally don't. There is absolutely no way that I have found to make my brain stop working at the pace it's used to, and the same goes for doing computer work in an office. Even when the goal is "slow down and make each task last longer" I find myself clicking and alt-tabbing just as efficiently as before.

It's a curse, I swear.

I just realized this is like my "I hate making good grades" rant from high school - there is no way to discuss this without sounding like an arrogant jerk. Oy.

At any rate - office drama. Everything from memos to emails to refilling the coffee maker can offset some kind of office rage in your standard cubicle worker. The funny thing is that everyone in an office tends to express their issues the same way - passive aggression. Very few people in a quiet, sedate office environment, where everyone stays in their little cages, are going to start yelling and punching others in the face.

No, we resort to tactics like post-it notes, messages on the dry-erase boards, intra-office instant messages, talking behind each other's backs at the coffee refill station, and, the topper of all passive aggressive moves - CCing the boss on an email exchange.

The BossCC tends to indicate that you are not only frustrated with someone - you want their supervisor to know about it. You think they are at fault for something, and should be punished. You think they are in trouble for what they've done or failed to do, and you are not content to merely sit on your hands and let it wash over. No, you want the boss to hear about this!

It's childish.

But what if something has happened the boss does need to know about? What if the system has hiccuped and is duplicating assignments and making 2 people work the same task, for example? What part of CCing the boss while you contact the person you're accidentally sharing a task with (to let them know of the mistake, nothing else), is passive aggressive? There's not ANY kind of aggression in that email, and yet.

It was not a bad day, just an interesting look at how people prefer to handle things. There originally was no blame to be had for the system being stupid, but somehow it turned into my fault to the other person, and he'd prefer if we just handle it ourselves next time, okay? No need to bring the boss into it!

/eyeroll

The world does not revolve around you any more than it revolves around me. I'm the new girl, what could I stand to gain by throwing someone under the bus for something that very obviously is just a technical error? What could possibly be garnered from an email of "Oh whoops we're both working this and I finished mine, have you finished?" full of smilies and an explanation for what's going on, could indicate that I was trying to get someone in trouble?

Meh. One of those situations where you have to shrug, guess they were having a bad day, and move on, I suppose.

I'm a Mutant.



This is an enlarged X-Ray of my thumb joint. See that little sun icon on the picture? That's the cursor the doc was using to move the image around, so I'm not that strange of a mutant. But just to the left of that on the picture? That little orb that looks like what those ghost hunters get so excited about?

Yeah, that shouldn't be there. But it's not the FIRST time this has happened to me. It is the first time it seems to have happened for no reason, so I guess my body is learning to use its powers without any catalyst. I don't know how I feel about that.

The first time this happened, as far as I know, was in response to a sprained or possibly chipped elbow bone. The sprain happened, at this point, 11 years ago, and I could never straighten my arm out or use it for much support from that point. The folks and I always figured it was because I didn't do enough of the "exercises" the doctors gave me.

Turns out, the real problem was this monstrosity:


That is my left elbow joint. And the circled object is the egg-shaped growth that was keeping my arm from being functional for NINE YEARS. By that time, the doctor was wondering if he should even bother taking it out, but my question was: A) It probably didn't start that size, right? And B) What if it keeps growing?

Never mind the arthritic possibilities of keeping that in my joint.

So it looks like the new pain in my thumb could stem from the irritation caused by the new activity I was doing at Target, what with lifting and carrying boxes pretty often. I'm hoping that it'll die down as the activity does.

Some people would suggest carpal tunnel as a possibility. That makes a lot of sense, as I've been a heavy computer user for most of my existence. However, I use the computer less now than I did a few years ago, the symptoms weren't anything like any carpal tunnel symptoms I could find on the internet, and the pain only started after the Target job did.

Which leads me to my next segment:



I quit!

I quit without working out the last of my two weeks! I feel horrible for it, but I also feel some strange gratification for making a decision that makes me happy and makes life easier for me.

The main conflict arose when I realized first I'd be working 50-60+ hours a week for a couple weeks, for no benefit to myself. My new job is double the hours and double the pay, and it's perfect for me. Sitting around typing all day with people who like me and who I like back.

The kicker really came when the HR manager came by after I had given my initial 2 weeks notice and tried to make me feel GUILTY for leaving, and then tried to tell me I should stay longer while they have to go through the arduous process of finding someone to replace me.

I'm sorry, Target. I really didn't want to make life harder on the girls who actually work in the Bakery, but when the management tries to make me feel guilty for moving on, and tries to manipulate me into staying longer than I'm contractually obligated to, claiming that it's hard to find people to work in this economy?

The whole thing left a bad taste in my mouth. So I left. It means I won't feel comfortable shopping there anymore, which is sad because I like Target, but it also means I won't be completely exhausted by working 7 days a week for a while.

So, yes it's unprofessional. Yes I burned a bridge. But I only worked there for a month before I left, and I think, if something awful comes to my current job, judging from the hits I got on my resume online, I think I'll be okay.

In celebration of freedom, I'm watching Office Space. This should both prepare me for my office job, and let me be happy that I no longer work somewhere I don't really like.

Toodles!

A new spin.

I've decided to team up with my swank camera-phone and take a picture of something interesting from my day, and write on it.

I've had a strange week of long-term life decisions, but in short, I've put notice in at Target that I will no longer be working there (after a whole month, bad me), because my previous employers contacted me and offered me double the hours at double the pay. Too bad, so sad, right?

I will have to take night classes this Fall, but I think I can make it work. I'm smart and dedicated that way.

So! Today started with Cheerios and yogurt, and then a trip to the drug testing facility to reassure my future/previous bosses that I had not become a crackhead since they last saw me. Let me take this moment to admit that, despite having never taken a drug (other than prescribed pain pills after a surgery), I still get nervous when it comes time for drug testing. I don't know if it's just the severe, silent environment in the waiting rooms at those offices, or if it's the invisibly present knowledge that I could lose a job opportunity if I messed this up. Even though I know I haven't done anything wrong. Or maybe it's the fact that, to be prepared for these things, I drink a ton of water and then sit in the waiting room for way too long, bladder full to bursting, because it's not like you can just show up dry, y'know?

Also, pee-in-the-cup tests are one of the few moments in life where I wish I had a penis.

Anyway - saving all the gross details: I don't know if it was nerves, or just me being an utter klutz, but after managing to fill that dang cup enough (not entirely, thank God), I knocked it over. That's right - I spilled pee all over the restroom at a drug testing facility.

Brilliant.

I am not proud of this. I was, in fact, beet red for the rest of the afternoon. It worked out, in the end, but 1) ew, and 2) omgembarrasingandwhatdoIdonowthatmybladderisempty!?

So, that was part 1 of my day. I know, aren't you so disappointed that wasn't the thing I took a picture of?


Photobucket

Nah, the picture that grabbed my attention today was a shot of the sandwiches my fiance and I bought at Bone Daddy's, a lovely booby-joint restaurant that serves amazing food (and "scenery" I guess. What a tacky term for half-naked waitresses). It was called the Flying Pig Sandwich, and, if I recall correctly, it had on it:

  • Pulled Pork
  • Bacon
  • Smoked Sausage Links
  • Maple Ham
AND IT IS AMAZING.

Cat on my lap now, that means it's time to sign off!


Focusing

There is no future
There is no past
I live this moment as my last
There's only us
There's only this
Forget regret
Or life is yours to miss
No other road
No other way
No day but today

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Whenever I look back at my life so far (a whole 20 years?  Yeesh.), I can't help but wonder how I was able to entertain myself so thoroughly growing up.  A book, a sandbox, a bug, that was all it took to get my imagination turning its figurative gears.  I could make adventures out of Word Searches, and often did.  I loved those things.

Even looking all the way back to middle and high school, things were just... different.  I had a blog back then, one that is probably still hosted and I could go dig through, but I don't feel that depressed today.  I wrote almost daily for a few years, and it felt good.  I expressed myself, I had funny ideas and opinions that may not have been well-thought out, but were at least the beginnings of who I am and what I believe today.  I always knew, coming home from school, what I wanted to write about, who I wanted to address, and I had friends in that community to support as they supported me.

I guess what I notice most about my childhood was that I could focus on something, on a little something, for hours.  I spent far too much time in a sandbox, sifting through sand so I could find the pretty quartz crystals.  Not to keep them, just to find them, go "Ooo" and then put them back and start again.

I would dig holes.  Not for any exact purpose, I would just dig.  Be it in a flower garden, or in the empty lot next to our new home, I would be out there digging away, and giggling as I played with the worms I found, and freaking out when I found maggots.  Caterpillars were my favorites.  I could see them on a grass blade from what seemed like a mile away.  I could find the best plants to play with (Indian needles!) by skimming over a field for a second and finding their wavy tops.

Now?  Now I just see grass and dirt.  I don't see the bugs.  I just see sand in a sandbox.  Word searches are all right, but not very mentally stimulating.  Very little gets my brain going like those days used to, and I miss it.  I miss it very much.

I took a good step in trying to rediscover focus, recently.  I quit World of Warcraft.  Perhaps forever, perhaps not, but it was becoming a consumptive force in my life, rather than an idle pasttime.   I was upset over things happening in a game, though the events did occur between people I knew in real life, or had known for a very long time through the game.  That is not much of an excuse, though.  It's still, overall, a game, and should not work against my enjoyment of my time spent playing it.

Also, I'm broke, so paying $15 a month for something that was making me miserable?  No, thank you.

I've been reading more, been trying to keep in touch with friends more, been listening to more music, replaying old favorite games of mine to spark an interest in my consoles again.  But I just feel... lost.  I appreciate my being able to see the bigger picture, but sometimes I wish I could just switch back to looking at the components again.  Sometimes it's nice to not be able to see the forest for the trees. 

My first assumption about why this happens is simply that time goes by faster as you age.  A day could, and did, last forever when I was younger.  Children lack the ability to see beyond what is happening in the immediate or near future, and thus the moment is all that matters.  Now, I know when I'm working 2 weeks in advance, I know when papers are due, when assignments must be completed, and when my tests are months before they occur.  Everything is processed in conjunction with the future.  Playing this game now means I will not be reading this book that I want to finish.  Drinking this water now means I will have to use the restroom in the middle of the night.  Slacking off today means I'll have more work tomorrow.

A second guess about my lack of focus and discernment recently has to do with the stage of life I'm at.  I'm about to begin my 3rd year of college.  I'm getting married in October.  This is the point in life when everyone begins parsing out what they're going to do for the rest of their lives.  They may be entirely wrong, but it seems most everyone attempts to plan it out, and Lord am I guilty of planning. 

So now, all I see is the future.  Getting through now to get to the blessed future where everything will be better.  We'll have money and jobs, we'll have a house, we'll have a family, I'll work in a career I love instead of doing retail to pay the bills.  

But just look out there.  4/5 college graduates don't have a job offer right now.  Every home seems to be nearing foreclosure.  More people are getting laid off, and less people are hiring.  College is a safe haven.  I should be happy I have a good relationship, and a job, not moaning about how I hate standing up for 6 hours and how things aren't how they were supposed to be.  Get in line, self.  Nobody's life turns out how they expected, and these times are making that more true than ever.  Nobody expects to get laid off.  Nobody expects to go bankrupt.  Nobody expects any of this.

My plan so far has been shot down the drain, so why am I so insistent on making another one from the scraps, instead of focusing on the here, and the now.  I can't keep living life in terms of the next obstacle in my way.  I need to be prepared to handle what's coming, but instead, I sit and mope all day about having to go to work.  I could be enjoying what time I have, instead of focusing on what's to come.

I miss the humor in my writing.  I could be witty, once.  I don't know where it's gone.  It seems all I can write is the drama in my head, to make sense of what plagues me.  That's dull, because it's always the same, but apparently I need to keep revisiting it.  Someday, maybe the light will shine again.

Lesson the second...

Blackbird singing in the dead of night
Take these broken wings and learn to fly
All your life, you were only waiting
For this moment to arise
"Blackbird" - The Beatles

Well, to introduce the second step of making myself feel better, I must first explain that I am in the process of recovering from the Cold from Hell, accompanied by his brother, Possible Strep Throat.  The recovery included 5 days of antibiotics, missing class, and being in a haze while writing a paper that wasn't due until the week after because I mistakenly read the Old Syllabus.  

ANYWAY.  The recovery also included losing my ability to smell and taste.  I could taste things all throughout the actual illness, but now I'm left battling a mostly clear nose, but something is up in my sinuses blocking smell from getting to my brain.  The only good part about this is that I was afraid the nerves might have actually been damaged throughout the sickness, and that can take forever to go away.  But this morning I noticed I could taste things if I blow my nose (only while I am physically blowing my nose, though) or otherwise bent over at the waist.  Weird, right?

So I have been doubly in the dumps for the past few days.  It's kind of amazing how losing your taste buds can affect a fat girl who apparently relies on food to make her feel better (healthy relationships with food are for losers).  I lost all meaning for a while.  I just kind of sat dully on the couch, moping and refusing to eat because it felt like a waste if I couldn't taste it, and I got no joy from it.  Not even that, feeling food and being unable to taste it was a legitimate downer for me.

But I've realized I will get my sense of taste back, and while I'm suffering from this head cold, I should probably just work on how I feel about food in general.  For a spell, I was able to eat when I was hungry, stop when I was full, and I actually was not worried about what I would be eating next or having a snack or anything of the sort.

So, incredibly long introduction over, I am looking to be much more productive.  I went on a walk with Fiance after dinner!  We went to the nearby tattoo parlour to peruse their talents and see what they could offer (for when we have money again >_o), then we went to Wendy's and got some Frosties.  It was a lovely night, and I wanted to take advantage of it before the heat rolls into town tomorrow.

I even put makeup on today!  That was the other upper.  I don't normally make myself up, but on a shopping run for some floss and shampoo, I saw some nail polish that matches my wedding dress and some eyeshadow that might as well, so I picked them up to play with.  I felt all pretty, even with my raspy voice and occasional phlegmy coughing.  

So walking was nice, aside from the problem that it was warmer INSIDE most of our stops than it was outside, so I ended up all sweaty.  But a nice shower fixes all problems of that nature, and thus it has been a good day.



On a side note!  

The paper referenced earlier?  I scrambled all weekend to finish it, then found that it wasn't due until NEXT Monday.  Which means it's kind of an awful paper written in a medicated, sick haze, but at least it's mostly done!  

The OTHER paper I had to work on was supposed to be due in rough draft form tomorrow, but apparently the professor of that utterly useless class (uuuuugh) decided she would rather just be done with the class due to the students' complaints.  This means we have moved our Final Exam up from May 10th or sommat, to THIS THURSDAY, and the exam review is tomorrow instead.  

She also moved the rough draft to being due next Monday as well.   

Oh well.  At least I won't have to go to that class anymore, and I can just finish up this semester and never make these mistakes again.  I've learned a lot from these months, but I'd really rather have done with it and move on.  

Lessons Learned:
- Don't sign up for classes too early in the morning as a commuter (or even in general)
- Don't sign up for Lit classes.  Just wait for them to post their syllabi, get the books that look interesting, and read them on your own.  Seriously.  Every Literature class suddenly devolves into boring reading sessions in class and then you do a research paper.  Ugh.
- Take some fun elective to balance the rest of the crap you go through.
- Go to class.  Really.  But bring a second notebook to write and doodle in when it gets dull, because it always will.
- Stop playing WoW.  No, really.  It only gets in the way, and it's $16 a month I paid to NOT do my homework and struggle with my grades due to apathy and distraction.

That's all for now!

G'night. :)

Brush your teeth.

It’s odd, but I can tell a good day from a bad day very easily.

 A good day, I wake up, I take my pills, I brush my teeth, I read my news and webcomics, I do reading for class, I pack up and I go to class.  

A bad day?  I’m lucky if I even wake up.  But eventually I do, begrudgingly so.  I take my pills, but here’s where the difference comes:  A day can be decided on whether or not I brush my teeth.  

It’s gross, I know, but it’s a sign of the problems I sometimes face.  I do struggle with mild to moderate depression, and part of that mental disorder is the inability to do even the simplest of things, especially those that need doing.  

On a bad day, I look at my toothbrush and I think, “Eh. I’ll do it later.  Maybe after I eat something and read a little.”  Then I mope to my computer chair, huddle under a blanket and sulk about going to class until I either go late, or skip it altogether.  

 

So my theory is this: If a day can be determined by how I feel about brushing my teeth, can I beat the game by taking that out of the equation?  If I take my pills and brush my teeth, even while I’m sulking, will that jumpstart the process of other things that must be done?  Will I accept my duty and go to class anyway?  Will I do my homework?  Will I put down the WoW for long enough to live life?

It’s an interesting theory, at any rate.

So, little kiddies, brush your teeth.  And drink your milk, and take your vitamins, and do your homework, and clean your rooms.  Not because it makes your mom happy, because it just might be good for you after all.  Be health and head conscious!  Like me, the overweight and depressed college student who hates college!

Cheerio!

Been a long time...

So, anyone who has been in contact with me recently has become somewhat aware of a few things. One, I hate school. Two, I'm getting married this Halloween, and I'm trapped in the craziness of wedding planning. Three, life is hard.

Basically, I let myself get trapped up in a ball of negativity that has been rolling along steadily for a few months now. It's not fun, and I refuse to stay with it any longer. In its place will be writing, listening to music, reading, meditating, happiness in the face of stress.

I will do what I must to make myself go to class, even if that means blocking out every stimulus besides music and the lecture once I get here, with the magic of my MP3 player. I will plan my wedding without fear of failure and without making myself stress to death. Instead, I will be grateful that I have been given the chance to marry someone so perfect for me.

I will not snap at my friends, or be unfriendly towards anyone. Being negative is the lazy response to life, and I have been coasting along on the tide of anger for too long. Behind every jerk who pisses me off is someone who probably has a problem I could care about, but hating them because of surface behavior is so much easier that I forget what I am.

I forget who I believe in, what I follow as my personal code for my life, and what the heart I've been given feels about people. I am not a negative person. I am not happy when I view the world through rage-colored glasses, and I have grown tired of living in that state of being.

So I'll stay to the sidelines in class, but I'll be here. I'll turn in my assignments, I'll do the readings, I'll pass the exams. I'll plan my wedding, I'll hang out with friends, I'll play my games and read my books, and I will keep my eyes open for what other people need while I do it. I have always been able to juggle many lives concurrently, it just happens that sometimes I get selfish and begin to feel angry at what I used to love doing.

I am only human, after all.

Oh, and I need to find a job or win the lottery. Good luck on that, right?

Class will be starting soon, but I wanted to write something, to document the turning point of this race I've been in. Wish me luck. The idea of turning off my MP3 player and listening to the dribble coming out of the other students' mouths is really not sitting well with me right now, but eventually I must.

*whimper*

Antisocial powers activate!

Okay, so I'm better now.

All right, so the pity party is over.  I successfully went to all of my classes, despite my campus' best attempts to make that impossible, I bought my books, and I'm back home after eating less than half of a chicken calzone for a late lunch.


Granted, books cost me around $400 this time around.  I've had success at buying my textbooks online in the past, but this semester I just had too many teachers requesting we have chapters read already, so I don't have the comfy waiting period to seek out a good deal and havei t shipped to me.

That'll learn me to wait and see the syllabi!

But at any rate, I'm feeling a little bit more confident now that I know what I'm really faced with.  A lot of reading and a lot of writing this time around, but I can hope and pray that it will keep my interest level up.  It certainly seems like a possibility, given the subject matters.

Educational Psychology, Cognitive Development, US History from 1865 on, Literary Analysis, and British Novels.   I can do this.  I can.  The writing will keep me busy, but none of it looks impossible.  I just have to keep a good eye on this stuff.  



On a different note, I'm considering asking the Fiance if we should look for a house around here.  We need more space, but not much more, and considering the market we could finance a house for around what we pay now, if not less.  It may not be a mansion or the best house ever, but...

We'll see, though.  It's something to think about.  Along with the possibility of me getting a job to help support that decision, but... I really would prefer to keep my school as my "job" and avoid the part-time work.  Granted, that's a luxury, but we're living fine off what Fiance makes, and I'm covered by my scholarship and some outside help, so it's not a big ordeal. But if we were to look for a house, I would pick up the slack to make sure everything goes smoothly.

It's just a thought.  Or maybe I should just get a job to help pay for health insurance for us, so we can actually get married at some point.

Hrm.

Anyway.  In short, I have more to think about than just the current problems I'm dealing with.  I have more in store in my life than college, and I'm not going to let it crush me death.  It's not worth it.  It's an important thing that I want to succeed at, and I will, but I can attain success without killing myself, so I will.

This must be what "pressing" felt like.

College and I are not getting along at the moment. It’s not something that’s easy to define, considering that I’m still pulling above a 3.5 GPA, despite my hatred of most of my classes/professors so far. In fact, regardless how much I realize that all of this nonsense is just high school again, with more pretension and unnecessary tedium (I didn’t even think that was possible), I still feel completely unsure of my every move.

I am good at school. I am a nerd. I like learning. The problem is that I hate inefficiency and I often feel paranoid that everyone knows something I don’t. Like, I do well on tests that everyone else does poorly on, yet they all seem to be doing better at this entire “college” thing than I am.

What sense does this make? I have a major, I have an idea for what I’d like to do with my life, albeit not all hammered out. I know I’d like to work as a counselor somewhere. Teaching seems like a good thing to do, as well, so maybe I just need to make up my mind about my chosen career path. That’s something most people in college have to do, so I’m certainly not behind in that regard. I’m engaged, I’ve got my own bills and debts to pay, and I make them monthly with no real problem. I’ve taken out loans, I’ve bought books, I’ve passed classes, and I’ve managed to not throw my life away by making dumb choices, so that puts me ahead of the curve somewhat, right?

So why do I feel so cripplingly inferior in every class I’m in? My confidence disappears when I step foot on this campus. I get jumpy, I feel lost no matter how many times I’ve been to the same classroom, and I’m constantly looking at every person walking by. I don’t even know many people on this campus, why should I be checking every face that goes by?

It just feels like everyone else is playing a different game. Including the professors, sometimes. It’s like, I’m here to learn and get my career going and get on with my life. Other people seem to be here to engage in the College Process, to play a game with credits and advisors and professors and acceptance letters, and I just want to get out. My goal is to reach End, get my diploma and get a life of my own. Their goals all seem to be to rack up as many accomplishments and inconsequential pieces of trash on the way as possible.

And the advisors here? Suck. So very hard. Every time I enter one of their offices with a question, I leave with a gray-area answer and more questions than I had going in. They are the anti-helpful. Not only that, they also mislead you on what it takes to get what you’re trying to do. One says you need to minor in an area to be able to teach it, another says you need to major in it. Some say, “Maybe you should change your major altogether, except you don’t really have to, because one guy didn’t, but maybe you should.”

Thanks for that golden advice, Mrs. Vague.

Maybe the problem is just how alone I feel. I recognize people in my major classes more and more, but I don’t… I don’t have any friends here. I’ve never been good at the friends-at-school game. I always had one or two in grade school, but that tapered off when the guys discovered girls. High school was just a game of being friendly and involved with groups at school, but I never had anyone to hang out with after school.

Now I have people to hang out with after school, but I can’t find anyone to relate to AT school. I’m here for the majority of my day, and I’m alone, stuck in my thoughts and concerns about inadequacy. Also I’m constantly exhausted. It’s just so tiring, life.

I just want to be done. I want to have a steady job, have some freedom, instead of constantly fighting back the stack of papers and homework that chase me down the halls. Instead of worrying about how much I hate my classes. Instead of being crushed by depression and anxiety, to the point of not being able to get out of bed to go to class, no matter how much I worry about my grade in doing so.

The older I get, the more my goal in life seems to be to not be bothered and not be noticed. I just want to get things done, and not be a hindrance to anyone else’s comings and goings. I want to blend in.

But I don’t. That’s not what I want, it’s just what I’ve been reduced to. I want to help people, I want to care, and I want to feel that passion I had for learning and getting grades and reading and helping out and… I want to live again.

If only this place would stop strangling me, I think I would be able to. I don’t know. I don’t know what to do anymore. I mostly just want to sleep and cry.

I don’t think the Celexa is helping yet.