www.patchesweaver.com
category: Uncategorized
tags:

I just finished an 80+ hour work week.  Throw overtime into the mix and I get almost three weeks pay in 1 week.  Not too shabby.  If it wouldn’t destroy my health and make me neurotic I’d be up for doing it every week.

We’re working on my boss’s house.  It’s a small beach house on Nantucket.  I’m excited to see it when we’re done.  It seems like an awesome project.  We’re starting with an original house, moving it closer to the beach, putting it on stilts, gut renovating it, and then building an addition.  Pretty cool.  And we’re shooting to get it LEED certified to boot.

The project manager just had a client meeting today.  I guess it’s a bit different when the client is your boss.  Anyways, they’re fast tracking the project.  My boss is a busy man.  I’ve only seen him for a grand total of about 10 minutes.  He’s going to be out of the area for a few weeks, so we basically had to scramble and put an entire CD set together in a week.  When the PM handed me the redlines for the plan, they were almost solid red.  One of the guys I work with was walking by and was like “Oh my God, it looks like somebody was murdered on that sheet”.

So ya, the financial pipeline has finally been turned on again.  Good good.

category: Uncategorized
tags:

So finally. finally.  I have found a gig that can actually be classified as a “real” job.  It’s at a 150 person millwork shop based in Holden MA.

Woodmeister Master Builders.  http://www.woodmeister.com/

I went on a tour of the shop about a month ago.  The place is HUGE.  A bunch of offices surrounding an 80,000 sq/ft woodshop.  “Master builders”… not just a creative name, this place is for real.  Stairs for instance… they have an entire stair department headed by a certified master stair builder. The spray “booth” alone is way bigger than the entire pratt wooshop… probably by about 4 times.  A CNC machine the size of a Uhaul truck and a ventilation system that stands like a silo on the exterior of the building… you get the idea.

I went in the first time with no promise of work.  I went for the tour, dropped my resume, and waited for the call to say I had the job.  No call came.  I finally heard back about two weeks later.  The head of HR called with a list of questions.  “Do you have CD experience? Rate your Autocad skills from 1-10, etc, etc. “  They were just doing a preliminary call to screen all of the applicants… No job yet… I then was called about 3 weeks later and asked to come in for an interview.  The interview was at 10.  I started work around 11:00.  Lose the tie, hurry up, and start running before you hit the ground.

Woodmeister does not exactly have an architecture department.  We (yes, I’m part of the crew now) have what is called the “design department”.  We act as consultants to designers and help them get their vague designs detailed and built.  As consultants, I’m actually surprised by how much work we do.  We make up drawing sets, space layouts, presentation boards,  specs, etc etc… all to the faint sound of the woodshop on the other side of the wall.

I am working as a temp at the moment.  I’ve been told by many people that this was the design department’s only way to get somebody through the door without freaking out the people in charge of the financial side of the operation.  Temporary until proven necessary.  This is the idea.  By the look of things, I’ll be busy for quite a while.  I’ve been told that I’ll be thrown on a bunch of projects over the next few weeks.

So that’s that.  Trabajo al fin.

category: Uncategorized
tags:

Finding work was tough.   I applied to a ton of places over the past month and a half.  Firms, construction companies, bars, a computer shop, teaching jobs, and even a hospital.

Dedicating yourself full time to getting a job is consuming in every sense of the word.  Nose to the grindwheel.  And it’s a rollercoaster.  uPS aNd dOWns.  Interview went well?  Don’t get your hopes up… the higher you are the harder you fall.

I finally had it widdled down to 2 promising jobs.  Bartending at a fancy pants steak house and working in patient services at a hospital.  I’d been working on both of them for quite a while.  Two interviews at each.  Each interview separated by a few weeks.  About a month invested in both application processes.  I even had to register online and take an hour long questionnaire for the hospital job.   For $13/hr.  Wow.

So the bartending interviews go well.  I meet the manager and the owner.  I ask about how the bar is at night.  They tell me to swing by, grab a beer, and scope the place out.  Of course I do it.  The owner even personally walks me over to her other restaurant across the street to introduce me to the bartenders over there.  Good sign?  I thought so.

Thank you for taking the time to interview for the bartending position. It was a pleasure to meet with you.

Unfortunately, we have selected another candidate whose background, skills and work experience better mirror the needs of the bar at this time. However, we would be pleased to keep your resume on file and will review it should another, similar opening arise.

We are honored that you chose to apply and wish you only the best in your future job search efforts.

No dice.  Mierda.  What next?  I was banking on this.  I had already applied to every place I could think of.

I no sooner begin climbing out of the frustration and get a call from the head of HR at Woodmeister.  “Can you come to an interview tomorrow?”  Does a bear shit in the woods?  I’ll be there with bells on.

category: Uncategorized
tags:

My recent stint with Mexican bartending and relentless continuation of a never ending application process to possible job openings has yielded a big fat mixed bag… of what? mixed feelings.

Mexican bar tending came to an end this past Thursday.  I didn’t necessarily quit and  I wasn’t necessarily fired.  It was more of a mutual agreement between my boss and myself.  We both arrived at the same conclusion… that maybe this job wasn’t the best fit for me and that maybe I wasn’t the best fit for the job.  To be capable of working at this bar alone on a busy night, one must be a bilingual, bartending superhero force with a big fat zero readout showing up on the ADD charts.  Though the farthest linear distance one can possibly be from the computer (while behind the bar) is 8′, it is almost impossible to walk this in a straight line.  The tiny 8′ distance that it takes to walk from a customer who has just ordered to the computer that refuses to cooperate is infinite.  Time and space instantly distort to a limitless wasteland where one is endlessly blasted with additional orders, requests for more napkins, attempts at beginning a conversation, etc.  This makes it very hard to keep track of everything while keeping everybody, including your boss, happy.

So anyways…. this mutual agreement came about after I was, as one could rightfully interpret it, seriously demoted to the status of, not a waiter, but a busboy.  After being thrown into the waters of an overwhelmingly crowded bar 3 weeks in a row and finding that it isn’t possible to shake presidente margaritas and tread water simultaneously, my boss decided that I needed a bit more training.  He felt that the best way for me to learn to put orders into the computers and learn the fundamental ingredients of each plate was to have absolutely no contact with either of these and deliver silverware, waters, and nachos to all of the tables instead.  Being the good sport that I attempt to be, I said that I would give it a shot.  I did it for one night.

“Why are you bussing Brian… you didn’t like bar-tending??”  This was the curious question that I was asked by the majority of the waitstaff.

Although bussing has secretly been a long held aspiration of mine, I simply replied that I was told that I needed more training and that I was going to possibly be a waiter in the future (which is what I had been told).  Needless to say, I was not rolling in dough by night’s end.  The amount of money that I was “raking in” took me back to my early highschool days.  Even with the complimentary financial nostalgia that came included with the position, it still wasn’t worth staying.

And look, this is what it all comes down to… I’m not trying to put myself up on a pedestal here, but hey, I have a five year degree folks.  I need to have some self respect.  This was the big internal struggle… and it really was.  Do I leave a job to have no job?  Tough it out?  If I leave am I giving up?  Bob Dylan once said in one of his early songs, “a dollar a day is work”.  Well… the jury’s still out on this one.  I guess it’s easier to say when you have a guitar in your hands… not a nacho basket.

So I’m no longer working at the Mexican restaurant.  All in all it was a good experience.  I’m just glad that it was a temporary one…

category: Uncategorized
tags:

How better to belatedly ring in the new year than to have the map holding the visitor information of your website reset.  We were doing pretty well there for a while with reps from about 30 different countries checking out the patchesweaver. com.    My guess is that on the one year anniversary of the map, it decides to erase all of the country totals in hopes that you will get the paid version… haha, like that’s gonna happen…

Anyways, so we’re starting over again.  It’s a new year and a new map.