I think I'm in the minority when I say that interviews just don't scare me. As a matter of fact I'll go as far as to say that my lack of nerves may have cost me a couple of jobs I didn't really want to land anyway. I always go in thinking I'm on the short list, whether I am or not I don't know, but for some reason I go in with the mindset that I'm the hottest candidate they'll be seeing that day. On second thought, maybe I actually am nervous. So much that I temporarily lose my mind when I cross the threshhold.
Last week I landed a job for which the interviewer and business owner told me over a hundred applicants applied. He told me he needed to hire me for the labor intensive job on the site first to see what kind of worker I'd be, but he was actually hiring me for another position in the future which entailed sitting in a temperature controlled office, sitting at the computer, making phone calls, dealing with the public and making upwards of 100K.
I bought it. And I accepted the job. The labor intensive one. Lucky for me my first day the fine people at the main office forgot to tell me I'd passed the drug screen and to go to work on Monday morning, and so when I finally got the call I arrived at the job 90 minutes late on my first day. This wasn't my fault at all, and they said as much, however since they kept talking about it I couldn't help but think in their hard-labor minds I should have forseen HR's oversight and contacted them to demand a start time.
Oh, but the fun was just beginning. Little did I know an intestinal ailment was about to befall me with vengeance, perhaps as a prelude to the Montezuma's Revenge I'll be undergoing next month. And I really didn't think about the record heat wave coming through rainy and cool Portland, topping out at 106 for my second and third days on the job.
Well, I made it through the first day. It was a slow day for them, but for me in my pathetic physical condition, bending over to clean something six inches off the ground, then applying most of my strength and effort in various strange physical positions for 8 or 9 hours, all in excess of 110F heat, began to wear me down. I barely had the strength to straighten back up so that I could sprint to the john to alleviate my other problem. I found that I was drinking a quart or more of water ever hour but still was unable to quench my raging thirst. And that was the first day. I drove home exhausted, wondering where it all went so horribly wrong, and hoping the cushy job for which I was hired was just around the corner. But no, it wasn't to be.
Day Two was more of the same but worse. It was hotter sooner. I spent much of the day in vehicles which were parked in the sun on a 106F day, sweltering with the windows up in 150F vehicles whose A/C didn't work. When I was able to get out I then had to immediately apply my flagging energies to this and that in yoga-like positions. I quickly began to imagine every step I took as my very own Trail of Tears, only the tears I was shedding was the sweat coming off me like Niagra Falls. Toward the afternoon, when the temperature peaked, I started to get dizzy, lurching about like I was my own Bataan Death March. I couldn't remember basic things, like what had I just done to this rig, which car is the Hummer, etc. Every minute I thought I might collapse, and with that came the terrifying thought that one of these times I'm going to need to make a dash for the bathroom and I'm not going to have the legs to get my intestines there. At one point I was surprised to feel goosebumps rise on my tortured flesh and found that I was no longer sweating. Somewhere in my mind I understood that this wasn't good, but luckily it was almost quitting time. I somehow was able to drive home, spending an hour under an ice-cold shower, then lying on the couch covered in ice packs.
Eventually the sun rose for Day Three. I could tell I hadn't really recovered. I was dizzy and thirsty when I awoke at 6 a.m. I broke my fast, guzzled a quart of water on the way to work, and arrived determined to blow their socks off with my enthusiasm for detailing cars in a make-shift kiln. The day started easily enough, it didn't break 90 until noon. I thought I was home free. Then the work started coming fast and furious, the mercury kept going up, and I spent my time lurching about from 110F in the lot to the 150F in the vehicles, all the while exerting all the strength and energy I could muster as fast as I could possibly go. I stumbled upon the dreaded Trail of Tears again about 2:30 and started my own rendition of the aforementioned Death March about an hour later. From then until 6 p.m. I was like living death, a little weakened by the battle raging in my intestinal fortitude but moreso afflicted by my physical condition, or lack of it, combined with the local thermometer freakshow. By the end of the day I vaguely wondered if I'd need an ambulance to get home, but I decided to risk driving. I kept the windows down in hopes the hot breeze blowing in would keep me alert, for my little car has no A/C. After an interminably long 5 minute drive I found the parking lot and parked the car. I lost my balance going up the stairs to the front door but skillfully recovered by grabbing ahold of the railing on the way down. All I could think of was getting inside to air that was below 110F. And that I did.
I briefly considered jumping in the ice shower with my clothes on but decided against it. Instead I just grabbed ahold of the A/C unit and clung to it. Three hours later my heartbeat was still over 100 beats per minute, I was still thirsty and I was still hot. Ice packs weren't doing it now and even though I stood under the shower until I thought we'd run out of cold water, my core temp wasn't coming down very fast.
And then it hit me: heatstroke! I had all the symptoms but the hurling, as it turns out. How close did I come to succumbing to the heat? I don't know, but I flirted with disaster, as Molly Hatchet put it once. Needless to say, I called in "sick" the next day, as I was basically a bag of human flesh spread out on the mattress, trying to congeal in time for dinner. The day after that I discovered that my services were no longer needed at the establishment, and for a second I wished I'd gone to the Urgent Care clinic and got a bit of Workman's Comp for my trouble. It was the perfect storm, really: record heat, hard labor, pathetic physical condition, and a little trouble with the G/I tract for kickers. I've done harder work in worse conditions (haven't we all?), but for some reason this time I wasn't up to the task.
But that's what I get for being a great interview, and I bet the Big Boss down there is wondering how he could have gone so wrong. I'm sure he'll find a Neanderthal soon that'll be able to swing it and, with any luck, that cro-magnon forehead of his won't be inundated with sweat due to a record-breaking heat wave. And he'll probably be half my age to boot.
But that was last week.
Obviously classes are over for the summer. I'm nervously awaiting my dramatic departure for the third world for some intense Spanish classes at the end of the month. If you are like me and only speak one language you probably have it on your Bucket List to learn a second one. Well, I've been picking away at Spanish for 25 years like a finicky kid in a high chair, carefully picking through the peas and carrots to get to the niblets of corn so highly prized by the toddler set. Basically I've just picked up a word or two here and there and excitedly tried them out on native speakers when I got the chance and, like a toddler, expected them to be equally excited by my progress. They usually weren't.
I've kept it up lo these many years, taking a Spanish class here and there and acing every one. Therein lies the rub, as they say in the Greek. Every single Spanish class I've ever taken prepares you to succeed at one endeavor: passing a Spanish exam. And I'm good at that. About the only exams that get the best of me are the more advanced mathematics, and by advanced I mean anything beyond Calculus 2. Other than that I find that my brain loves exams. So basically all the study I've done so far is get me to the point that I can prepare for and then pass a Spanish exam.
The prevailing wisdom among those who know, however, prescribes a totally different attack, that of immersion. And this I will attempt the third week of August going through the end of September. I will enter the world where English is the strange language, where the water you can't drink it, and the tortillas they are genuine corn. And the language classes, they are cheap. For 4 hours a day, one on one, you can learn this language and get three hots and a cot, all for the low, low price of 150 dollars per week. This little cottage industry keeps many an area in Central America going and, from what I've gleaned among the wise, they are good at it.
Some rules: don't bring the bling. Sure, it's a 25 dollar watch to you, but that's a month's wages to most in that area. If you must keep track of the time, keep it in your pocket. A laptop? Don't bring it. An iPod? Be careful. That's a dream gadget. Digital camera? Well, purchase some disposable cameras instead. Drink bottled water at all times. Don't go hiking alone. Don't go out after dark. Don't rent a car. Bring only what you are willing to be relieved of in a holdup.
Of course, there are the other rules, too. Make several copies of your itinerary and your passport and keep them in different places. Don't flash cash. Be polite. Make some effort to learn the social rules the humans live by in the area. The things I've picked up are basically to use a minimal amount of eye contact, inquire as to family health, and don't use first names unless you are invited to do so. It's also considered panache if you bring small gifts for your Spanish instructor and for the family with which you will be staying. Taxi drivers don't expect tips but you'd better get the price worked out before you get into the cab. Servers only expect tips from foreigners, not locals.
Of course I've gotten most of this from a small book with pretty pictures that I purchased from a Borders bookstore, but I've also frequented the sites which are themselves frequented by those who've gone this way before. Probably half of what I've read is nonsense and the other half is more true than I think. And then there's stuff no one's told me which will undoubtedly provide locals with a hearty laugh at my expense. That's OK, though. If they laugh at me I'll just snap a photo of them and steal their soul. I'll teach them to mess with such a formidable traveler as myself. I shouldn't be so hard on them because obviously they are fortunate enough not to have been marinating in the bleeding hearted liberal political correctness ideology which has been forced upon the populace of this fine country for the last 30years. They don't know that I, as a minority in their country, have a right not to be offended and that I can choose to be offended at any time for any reason that I so choose. Sadly, then, I can't expect them to walk on eggshells around me as a minority for fear of uttering something politically incorrect to which I might gleefully take offense.
And that's OK. Like I said, I'll just steal their soul. But if I really wanted to get mean I could sponsor them to live and work in the USA. I happen to know of a body shop that's hiring for a cushy job...
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