...as discussed with my co-workers today. One is officially 4 weeks from her due date, the other has two young kids under her belt (so to speak).
Advice #1
The correct response to all the unsolicited advice you will receive:
With a big smile: "Thank you for the advice!" (and do what you were planning to do anyway)
Advice #2
The correct response to yet-another-toy from grandma-to-be:
Said with complete honesty and enthusiasm: "What a great thing to have at grandma's house to play with!!"
You're welcome.
:-)
Lori
ab·surd (b-sûrd, -zûrd) adj. 1. Ridiculously incongruous or unreasonable. 2. Inconsistent with reason or logic or common sense 3. Of, relating to, or manifesting the view that there is no order or value in human life or in the universe. N. The condition or state in which humans exist in a meaningless, irrational universe wherein people's lives have no purpose or meaning. [Latin absurdus, out of tune, absurd : ab-, intensive pref.; see ab-1 + surdus, deaf, muffled.]
Monday, April 21, 2008
Friday, April 18, 2008
An engineer with 3 cats
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Are you careful?
I'm not concerned so much about googling someone, I'm more concerned about people googling me. But I do believe that my Internet interactions are as transparent as can be...If I were to suddenly run for office and my Internet dealings were uncovered, I'd be okay. I do attempt to write with an awareness of my audience.
But I must say, I worry about some others. I have Facebook counterparts who write the most obnoxious details of their lives in their updates. I have a friend who tells me that, working in HR in a large company, he regularly googles the people whose resumes he gets -- and has found one guy telling friends on a board somewhere that he peed in the staffroom sink at one job, and another one who bragged about stealing from a former company. I wonder how far they got in the interview?
Is your Internet face the same as your public face? Where do they differ? Curious minds want to know...
Lori