Hava Lyon’s Ramblings

My two cents…

Coming Back Home March 25, 2007

I have been all over the board with this, I know, but once again, I am working from home. I had been hired at a local company to help out in the office (the owner approached me, asking me to come work for her) back in August. Things went really well for a while, until I got promoted (which sounds good but it wasn’t, and it was rather against my will, actually) and the stress level went correspondingly through the roof. I was miserable, and things went from bad to worse, until I finally gave my notice.

I am not home to stay though. My plan is to go back to school this summer at a local university and become an elementary school teacher. You can find more info on my plan at my Families.com blog, but basically I am wanting to get my degree so I can become a teacher and make good, steady money and have benefits, along with (of course) enjoying working with children. I love kids very much, as anyone who has read this blog for a while knows, so I think being an elem. ed teacher will be perfect for me.

In the meanwhile, I’ll be blogging for Families.com and doing other random work-at-home jobs, which I’m sure I’ll be updating you guys regularly. There are a lot of fun WAHM jobs out there, and I’m excited to become a part of it all!

Hava

 

My Other Blog March 3, 2007

Filed under: blogging,Mitt Romney,Online Writing Gigs,Personal updates — Hava Lyon @ 1:28 pm


I have recently started another blog, but this one is different from the others: It is a political blog. I usually don’t get into politics much, but this year, there is a candidate that I strongly care about, and want to see win. Many politicians seem to have a long list of political experience and not much “real-world experience” as I like to think of it. Mitt Romney, on the other hand, has made millions of dollars in the private sector as a businessman, showing that he not only talks about how wonderful the American economy, he has experienced it firsthand, and will work hard to preserve it.

On top of his business accumen, Romney has also been a strong conservative in a very liberal state (he was governor of Massacusetts, one of the most liberal states in the country) and under his leadership, the economy of the state did a complete 180. From 2002 to 2006, he not only wiped out the state’s massive deficit, he even managed to have the state running a very large surplus by the end, almost unheard of in this day and age.

Anyway, if you’re not sure who the best man is for the job during this election, stop by my other blog and see if what you read is what you’re looking for. You may just be surprised.

Havs

 

My New Blog… December 28, 2006

So I have bad news: Someone is actually willing to pay me to blog, and I have taken them up on their offer. Seeing as I am a working fool (I work very long hours at my day job) I really don’t have time to update both blogs. I know most people could already tell that, since I haven’t updated on here since who knows when, but just in case someone is still holding out hope that I’m going to get my lazy butt in gear and start posting again, I’m afraid to tell you that chance has just gotten slimmer than Paris Hilton. When I can blog and make guaranteed money (although admittedly that pay isn’t very high, it is guaranteed pay) it’s hard to make time to blog elsewhere for free, as much fun as it is to blog about whatever topic I want to–my paid blogging job is strictly about jobs and employment, nothing else. I do try to keep my blog from becoming stagnant however, by talking about such “jobs” as being paid to play video games or being an online juror or other wild ideas I read about on the ‘net. Just because I have one topic doesn’t mean I have to be boring!

So if you ever have a chance, please check out my blogs at Families.com–I promise to try my best not to put you to sleep! :-D

Havs

 

I’m feeling so lucky right now October 1, 2006

Filed under: Career Step,Friends & Family,Personal updates — Hava Lyon @ 7:47 pm

This one has to be a quick post because my to-do list tonight is horrendously long, but I just wanted to say thank you to all people who commented on this blog and on the CS forums. It has really meant a lot to me that y’all care about me enough to take the time to write sweet things to me. :)

I had a boss who told me once: “The only person who never makes a mistake is the person who never gets out of bed. You made a mistake–so what? At least that means you got out of bed to do it.” He will most likely remain my all-time favorite boss, just because he was such a great guy. And a millionaire. He let me name his baby colt who will someday turn into a racing champion, I hope! (He raises race horses as a “hobby,” I kid you not.)

But that’s all off topic. I just wanted to say thanks to everyone, and also to say (yet again) that I am making the goal of writing in this blog more regularly. I’m really stinking it up, in terms of how steady my posts have been. ;) That’s gonna change, promise. :)

Havs

 

I’m alive, promise! September 29, 2006

Filed under: Personal updates — Hava Lyon @ 8:21 pm

I have been in a bit of a funk lately. I started a new job at a personal care company in August, with the intention of only working it part-time, and working my other job, court research, part-time. After working at the personal care company for a couple of weeks, my boss came to me and begged me, basically, to work for her full time. She had to fire a gal for insubordination and pure stupidity, and she really needed me full time. She even offered me more than what I was making before. I just couldn’t resist.

So I quit my court research job, and I quit doing the mystery shops. I am now back to working 9-5 Monday through Friday, exactly where I was at before. And when I say before, I mean before I started with Career Step. I signed up with Career Step in Nov of 2004. I signed up with them because I wanted to work from home, so when my hubby and I had kids, I would be able to still work and bring in an income. My husband doesn’t make enough to support the two of us, let alone enough to support children.

Eighteen months later, May of 2006, I had a huge awakening: I really don’t like medical terminology. There were many people on the CS forums who loved nothing more than a great medical question that they could track the answer down for. People who actually cared what the difference was between arteries and veins. I have never had any desire to be a nurse, a doctor, and after the whole Career Step venture, I found out that I apparently don’t have any desire to be a medical transcriptionist either.

Problem solved: I would do GENERAL transcription instead! To an outsider, it doesn’t seem like the difference would be that huge, but take it from an insider: It’s gigantic! They almost don’t qualify as the same field. So I got a job at a couple of general transcription companies, and life continued on. Until I realized that I was actually quite miserable being a general transcriptionist. There I was, just me and a pair of headphones, listening over and over and over again to a bunch of people talking over each other, trying to make out what each person was saying. And for some recordings, I not only had to understand each person, I also had to identify them. From an audio recording, no visuals included.

I lasted a couple of months there, maybe (can’t remember exact dates now) before I had to quit general transcription also. By this point, my poor hubby really should have been considered for sainthood. I was changing jobs like they were going out of style.

While I was doing the general transcription job, I got a very part-time job doing courthouse research. I decided to expand the counties that I went to, and I eventually started doing courthouse research and mystery shopping full-time, after I quit the GT job. I was also doing some virtual assistance work for the owner of the courthouse research company, Lark. I really loved Lark (she’s awesome!) and the company, but there just weren’t enough hours of available work to pay the bills, which was worrying me. Then I got a call from the owner of the personal care company, begging me to come work for her part-time. Not long after, I was working there full-time, and I had to quit the research job.

So I went from “Oh yeah, I’m going to work from home making lots of money as a medical transcriptionist” to “I’m working 9-5 Monday through Friday as a secretary.” Although I hadn’t sat down and thought about it, I realized in the middle of a phone call yesterday with my bro (hi David!) how much this was depressing me. I felt like a failure. I had spent thousands of dollars, literally, and 18 months of my life, all for nothing.

I wish I could say that I have gotten past all of this, and I no longer feel like a failure, but really, I am still struggling. At least I’m starting to crawl out of my cave again. As part of my job, I am required to answer phones, and the sheer volume of phone calls coming through the office is staggering. It’s difficult to get anything else done. By time I get home, I am ready to set my cell phone on fire rather than talk on it. I used to love talking to people because when I was staying home and studying all day by myself, I needed to have social interaction. Now, I’m overwhelmed with the amount of social interaction I am having each day, and at one point, I had almost completely withdrawn myself from the world, into my little shell. I spent each night after work reading forums. Anyone who has known me through cyberspace won’t be surprised that I have spent a lot of time reading forums. There has been points in the last two years where I would visit the Career Step forums or WAHM forums ten or twenty times a day. But back then, I couldn’t help but post on every thread I read, mostly because I’m a know-it-all. ;-) But in the last couple of weeks, I have been reading for hours (three, four, five hours a night) and yet I wasn’t posting but once a day, maybe. One quick post, if I was feeling really social.

Well you know what? I’m done guilting myself! Sometimes things work out for me, and sometimes they don’t, and I REFUSE to guilt myself for the next year or twenty years for not having the right personality fit for medical transcription, general transcription, and all the rest of the stuff I got into! As of right now, no more hiding for hours at a time, trying to pretend the world doesn’t exist. When the phone rings, heck, I might even answer it! Well, that might be going a bit far, but at least I’ll think about it. :-P

Anyway, for all of the people who were wondering what hole I fell into, and if I was okay, now you know. I’m perfectly all right, just indulging myself in a pity party. I don’t have time for any more pity parties–I’ve got too much to do!

With that note, I’m off to balance my checkbook. That is, sadly, on the to-do list. Hopefully I can find something on this list that doesn’t include selling my unborn children to pay for heat. ;-)

Hava

PS Wow, this is so neat, and yet, a little scary at the same time. I had just finished writing this post and was about to post it, when I got an e-mail from Ken. Thank you Ken, for the e-mail. Anyway, Ken sent me a link for a thread on the Career Step forums, where a bunch of my friends from there were all posting, looking for me because they were worried. Hi you guys!!!  Y’all are so terrific. I don’t know how I was so lucky to fall into such a fantastic group of people, but I’m really happy I did. Loves to you all!!!

 

WAY too much irony August 27, 2006

Filed under: LDS Church,Mormons,Personal updates,West Nile Virus — Hava Lyon @ 2:23 pm

They talked about me and prayed over me today in Relief Society (for those not familiar with the Mormon religion, Relief Society is a meeting for just the ladies in a congregation.) When my husband came home from church and told me this, my first reaction was extreme embarrassment. I wasn’t someone important enough or whatever to be prayed over. Once I got past my initial horror enough to speak, I said, “Wait a minute, how would you know?”

Considering Relief Society is a girls meeting, and Doug is most definitely a guy, this was a legitimate question.

“Because they talked about it in Sunday School.” If it would have been possible to sink through the floor, I probably would have. Sunday School is a meeting for both guys and gals, so if you missed the announcement in Relief Society, you could have heard it the second time around in Sunday School. Yay me.

“Were they talking about just me, or everyone?” I squeaked out.

“All of you guys. I guess there has been five cases of ladies getting it in our congregation in the last couple of weeks.” That made me feel much better. Not the fact that there were more people than just me getting sick, but the fact that everyone didn’t just sit around and say how sad they felt that I was sick. For some reason, that thought was just too mortifying. But as part of a group, I was fine.

Of course, fine is a relative term. When you have West Nile Virus, everything’s relative. Now anyone who missed my last blog, I want you to immediately stop reading and first feel extreme guilt that you could ever miss something as important as one of my blogs. Afterall, there are at least two people in this world who make it their very first priority every morning to check to see if the Venerable Hava posted while they weren’t looking. C’mon, join the crowd, do what everyone else is doing. You’re never going to be cool if you don’t.

Now that you are past the guilt part (boy, that didn’t last long) scroll down and read my last blog entry entitled “Irony.” Now you understand why I entitled this blog “WAY too much irony.” This kind of thing happens in movies and books, but apparently happens in Hava’s life too. Be careful what you laugh about–isn’t that some sort of axiom? It oughta be. Maybe I could tradmark it and make millions. Then I really would be laughing, promise.

It all started Friday evening, after a truly horrid day. Doug suggested we go for a walk, so I could get out of the house and stop worrying about the no-good-very-bad-day I had just suffered through. I jumped at the chance, and we left. We left for a jaunt around the block. Now you must know, our “block” is actually much bigger than a standard city block, and I’m usually pretty tired by time we make it all the way around it. But this time, about 3/4′s of the way done, I started to feel really tired, much more than I usually feel. All waitresses and cashiers will know what I’m talking about: I had that feeling that you get when you’ve finished a shift where you have been standing on your feet for 8-10 hours and your legs just ache. At first, I ignored it. After all, I had had a long day (which hadn’t included a whole lot of standing, actually) and this was a long walk, and maybe it was just a combination of those factors.

Farther down the sidewalk, the ache had intensified, and it had spread up past my thighs into my hips. It felt like I had been beat with a tire iron, and I couldn’t figure out what on earth was going on. “Doug, I am really tired. I don’t know why.” Rounding the last corner, the house in sight, my whole body was aching all over like I had been beat repeatedly with the tire iron. By time Doug got the front door open, I was light-headed and a bit disoriented. I knew where I was, but the world seemed just a little off-kilter. The pain was overwhelming. My whole body ached–my teeth, the hairs on my head, my bones–heck, I’m sure my toenails were causing me pain. I hadn’t hurt like this since I had the flu a couple of years ago. I wouldn’t say the pain was stronger than that bout of sickness, but it certainly was on par with it. I got the chills and couldn’t seem to warm up. I was under blankets (Doug was wonderful just as all husbands should be, and he helped me to the bedroom, helped me get in bed–all those things wonderful hubbys should do. I have never been so grateful for my spouse as I was that night) and Doug was rubbing my arms and my back while partially covering my body with his. It was warm in the house, and yet the shaking/teeth chattering/chills continued.

I asked Doug for some water, because my throat ached so bad. He got some and brought it back. I would start to get warm, then take a drink and instantly start chattering again. I finally got it through my befuddled brain that the water was cold, and was the cause of the cold boughts. I stopped drinking but it still took a while to warm up.

As all grown-up independent women do who are out on their own, I called my mom. I do not know why, but mothers can always make you feel better, even if they’re half a world away. My mom was only a half a state away, but might as well have been a half a world away. In Idaho, a half a state is quite a distance. No fear though, she still made me feel better. She told me all the things mothers are supposed to tell their sick children, and ended by suggesting that I take a warm bath. My teeth were still chattering at this point, and I was definitely up for any ideas to warm up. Doug helped me out of bed (I couldn’t even sit up without his help at this point, let alone walk across the room. Are you kidding me? I would have considered walking to the kitchen at that point to be an Olympic event) and helped me into the tub. After I warmed up enough to take a thermometer in the mouth (you can’t have your temp taken if your teeth are chattering, FYI) we found out I was registering at 100.4. No wonder I felt so darn awful crappy.

Doug helped me out of the tub and back into bed. He gave me some Tylenol PM and I drifted off to sleep. I woke up later–I’m not sure what time it was, I was completely disoriented–and all I could think was how hot it was. I stumbled out of bed and threw the bedroom window open to let the evening breeze in. I laid back down and my last thought was, “I don’t want to lay here–my pillow is covered in sweat!” I don’t think I stayed awake long enough to even move my head to a different spot on the pillow; if I did stay awake that long, I don’t remember it. Doug says he came in later and felt me–he said I was on fire. He said I had all of the covers off, the window was open, and I was burning up. I believe it.

I woke up Saturday morning feeling marginally better. At least I no longer felt frozen to the core or in the fires of Hades. I stumbled to the doorway of my husband’s office. “You wanta take a shower?” I mumbled. For some reason, when I’m sick, my tongue is the first thing to go. I can never talk clearly when I’m sick. Luckily, Doug has had 5 years of practice to understand my mumbling, and didn’t even hesitate. “Yeah, let’s go.”

I got as far as shampooing my hair and getting it out, when I started to feel very light-headed. “Dang it!” I thought. When I’m sick, my body seems to deal with it by having me pass out in the shower. I don’t know why I do this, but once or twice every six months or so, I’ll pass out in the shower. The first time this happened, Doug flipped out. He was sure I was dying. Now, he just calmly shuts the water off, helps me sit down on the floor of the shower, gets a towel off the towel rack for me and draps it around my shoulders, and leaves to get ready for the day. I sit on the floor of the tub until the world comes back from the gray/black place it had been hiding at, and it stops spinning dangerously, and then I can stand up. Until the world comes back and stops spinning though, don’t even bother with trying to move me. It won’t work. It’s my body’s way of saying, “Stop, you need to stop right now, you’re sick.” I listened to it, and went back to bed.

I spent most of the day either sleeping or whining and complaining to my hubby about how sick I felt. The earlier, “I feel a little bit better today” thought was completely gone, replaced by, “If I died, I wouldn’t be in nearly as much pain.” The meanie he is, Doug wouldn’t kill me, no matter how I begged. I reminded him about the high life insurance policy we have on me, and he reminded me that wouldn’t do him a bit of good if he was rotting in prison. Sheesh, you can’t even buy loyalty these days.

When the people in the ward found out I had West Nile, the food started coming. Fan of the Mormon religion or not, you have to admit they have the “Sick Person Food Delivery System” down pat. Doug told me that since I was supposed to be cooking dinner, he “guessed” it counted that although I didn’t cook, I was the person responsible for the food showing up. I told him that was very nice of him to say, as we dug into our green salad, homemade spaghetti, oatmeal bread, and cake for dessert. Heck, if we got to eat this nice when I was sick, perhaps I ought to be sick all the time. It almost made up for the 101.6 temperature I was running. Almost.

I slept in this morning (as Primary Pres, you can bet your bottom dollar I don’t spend much time sleeping on Sunday mornings) and enjoyed a bit of time lazing about in bed. I got up and took a shower (no passing out this time, which is good, because Doug was gone to church and wouldn’t have been here to catch me) and felt almost human.

I tell you what though, no more laughing at people who have West Nile. The irony has become too much, even for me. ;-)

Havs
Who is just happy to be alive…

 

I don’t like water July 17, 2006

Filed under: Babysitting,Death,Drowning,Friends & Family,Idaho news,Personal updates — Hava Lyon @ 11:35 am

When I was in junior high, there was a kid that was a year older than me, and much bigger than everyone else. He was a typical teenage boy in that he loved to be mean to anyone who would give him the satisfaction of giving him a response. I was never a huge fan of his (I didn’t hate him, but I did do my best to avoid him,) but then one day, in the middle of summer, I got a phone call and they told me he had died. He had gone swimming in the Snake River and had gotten sucked under in the current. He was swimming next to a dam, and it was just too strong for even him, and he was a big, strong, athletic kid. When I heard the news, I went running outside and down the road and just bawled. I may not have liked him sometimes, but this just seemed unfair. I remember screaming at the heavens, “Why God?? Why did this have to happen??” It was the first time I had ever had to deal with an early and untimely death, and it was really rough on me.

Well, I just found out that a girl I used to babysit was killed this weekend, also a casualty of the Snake River. This is so hard for me–I can’t even grasp that it is right. It doesn’t feel like this could truly be happening. I went to this family’s house every day, Monday through Friday, and watched Ashley and her two older brothers, for two summers. I was a part of the family. I did dishes, laundry, cleaned, watched the kids–we would go to the park and play, we would walk back to my house and play there. We would go outside and pet the horses–Ashley loved horses and was endlessly fascinated by them, even the onrey ones. She was only 4 years old the first summer, and 5 years old the second summer, so she was still just a young kid, but boy did we all have fun together. I really loved that family.

This article here talks about trying to find her body, and not being able to. I still just can’t believe it’s true. They came to my reception when I got married, I sent them postcards when traveling over in Jerusalem–this just isn’t fair. Ashley was a good kid.

I have never been a huge fan of water. Last summer, I went floating down a fast-moving river with my family in intertubes, and I got knocked off of my intertube and couldn’t get back on. I screamed bloody murder for probably 10 minutes because I was petrified at the thought of drowning. I would hate to die of course, but for me, I have always had this especially strong fear of drowning. I’m not sure why, but that fear is very, very strong. I have never been a great swimmer, and I have no desire to change that.

This happening, two people dying from drowning in the Snake River–you may never see me in a bathing suit again. I still just cannot fully comprehend it. Ashley was so much fun, and a good person. She wasn’t perfect by any means, but I loved her a lot. Since I was at her house every day, all day long, some times she would slip up and call me Mom. She was a very special kid to me.

Anyway, thanks for listening, everyone. I just needed an outlet to talk.

Havs

 

I’m an old woman July 4, 2006

Filed under: 4th of July,Good Manners,Personal updates,Rude People — Hava Lyon @ 11:23 pm

No, truly, I am. I know that my driver’s license only says I’m 25, but nights like this make me feel much older. The hubby and I walked over to the lake where the fireworks were going to be set off, and had quite the night. There was a live band at the park which sounded like they were trying to be in direct competition with Jimmy Hendricks minus the ability to play a guitar or sing well. They didn’t play any patriotic songs at all, and when the fireworks started, they didn’t stop. Their music wasn’t in any way related to the fireworks, it didn’t correspond with it or crescendo/decrescendo with it, but instead it was almost like there were two concerts going on at the same time–one a boring fireworks display and one a discordant rendition of Sweet Home Alabama. They finally quit about 10 minutes in to the fireworks starting, and I’m not sure if that helped, because then all you heard was either the boom of the fireworks (when you were lucky) or the group of teenagers sitting close by who were all flirting and laughing (when you were unlucky.)

As the fireworks exploded overhead, my mind wandered. I mentally put together a to-do list for tomorrow. I wondered how my dogs were doing at home (they abhor loud noises, which makes the 4th of July the worst sort of torture for them.) I went over items that I wanted to cover on my WAHMJobs.net website. And then I would think, “Oh yeah, there’s fireworks going off up there.” I would glance at the exploding red, blue, and white display in the sky and before I even had a chance to register what I was seeing, I was back to mentally rearranging my front yard’s flower beds.

Pretty soon my mental meanderings were interrupted by yet another group of teenagers. I thought the ones sitting next to us who were all flirting and laughing and talking incessantly were pretty bad, but they were nothing in comparison to the group who came walking up behind us. Two of the members of this preteen group were in some sort of heated argument, and I would quote that argument for you, but 95% of the words in that argument were pretty nasty swear words, unrepeatable by any standards. I leaned over and whispered in Doug’s ear, “Are we sure we want to have kids?” He whispered back, “No,” and I laughed. The soon-to-be juvenile delinquents (they very well could be delinquents now, but they are too young to be considered juveniles) wandered off after a while, and I did my best to concentrate on the admittedly very boring fireworks display still going on overhead. This year’s showing was nothing to write home about, to state it politely.

I whispered to Doug, “I think I am an old woman.” He whispered back, “You want to go?” God bless him, he is just amazing. I would have given my eye teeth to be able to leave just then. We stood up and started walking home. About a 100 feet down the path towards home, the finale began. We stopped and turned and watched it together, snuggled arm in arm with each other. The finale only lasted about 20 seconds, and then we turned and walked home together.

I may be an old woman, but at least I married an old man. We can be the youngest old couple to ever walk the Earth.

Hand me my cane, will ya? I’ve got some teenage kids I need to go thump some good manners in to.

Havs

 

I’m a little behind times… June 18, 2006

My mother wrote me an e-mail yesterday, asking me why I hadn’t posted anything new on here. I hadn’t even realized she had been reading the blog! So Mom, I’m sorry. I have been quite busy lately (wow, anybody surprised? ) which I’ll tell you about in just a second.

But first off, I wanted to put up a mini-rant. Yesterday, I received a comment on my last post, and the comment simply said this, “You’re such an attention whore.” Nothing else. It was, not surprisingly, put up by an anonymous person. So I have come to the sad conclusion that I cannot allow anonymous posters respond to my blog anymore. If you are going to indescribably rude and obnoxious, you will at least now have to attach your name to it. That is my tiny bit of revenge being enacted. I deleted the comment, BTW. I am not about to let something like that stay up on my blog.

So now that I have given the satisfaction to that person of knowing that s/he got to me (something I told myself I wouldn’t do, but I am obviously ignoring myself, never a good thing!) time for a bit of catch-up.

I wanted to tell everyone some plans I have in the works. For the few who didn’t know, I was a student for 18 months at Career Step, to become a medical transcriptionist. I decided only a couple of weeks ago that I did not want to be an MT, and I have instead jumped head first into the world of general transcription. Yes, there is actually a large difference between the two, for those uninitiated people out there, and I am actually doing very well as a GT. You are paid a set amount for each job, no matter how long it takes you to do the job, so the faster you go, the more you end up making per hour. I didn’t keep track of my time during my first 2 jobs, but I did start keep track on my 3rd job, of how much I was making. I went from making $7 an hour in the third job, to $8.50 by the sixth job. I probably won’t continue to make such drastic improvements like that in the future, but I am at least hoping to not slide backwards. I would be content to stay at $8.50 an hour for a bit, until I got more used to what I was doing. My goal is to make fairly good money (meaning $10+ per hour) within a month or so. We shall see.

But anyway, that is all beside the point. The reason I am bringing all of this up is because when I decided that the MT world really wasn’t for me, and that I wanted to be a GT instead, I posted about it on the Career Step forum. The response has been absolutely overwhelming. I have gotten innumerable PMs (private messages) and e-mails in response, so much so that I have almost given up on trying to respond to everyone. I feel really bad because I have some very good friends who have been waiting several weeks to get a response to an e-mail they sent me. That’s no good. I feel really guilty about that, and I am hoping to slowly but surely work my way through all of that correspondence and catch up. In the meantime, please forgive me if you happen to be one of those people who are waiting. I promise you, I am not ignoring you!

So because of the response that I have gotten, and the amount of people who have told me how interested they are in the GT world, and could I give them more info, and who do they apply to, and what software do they have to buy, and how much is the pay, etc etc etc, I have decided that I really needed to put something together that I just point everyone to, and say, “Here you go, go read this. It will give you everything you need to know.”

Thus, www.wahmjobs.net was born! No, stop, don’t go there now, it is only a blank page at the moment! But that should change over the next several weeks; I am hoping to get it up and running fairly quickly. I plan on having information on both general transcription and medical transcription on the site, so that people can compare the two and make an educated decision on which one they want to do. There are many people who have zero interest in becoming a GT, and they only want to do MT work. There are people who have zero interest in becoming an MT, and only want to do GT work. I want to show people who haven’t made up their minds on it yet, the pros and cons of each one, and let them make the decision for themselves on what they want to do. This life is all about choices, right?

But I also want to talk about other jobs that you can do, such as researching or mystery shopping or scoping or being a virtual assistant, or whatever, so that people can see what a huge variety of jobs there are out there. I love helping people, it’s what makes me tick, and I truly think this website will be the way to make that happen. Once I get the site up and running, I will put a notice on this thread and on several forums I belong to, so y’all can check it out. I am hoping to serve a true need with this site; to let guys or gals look over the choice of jobs and make a decision about what they want to do. There is so much out there, and it can be completely overwhelming to a newbie, so hopefully this site will take the “overwhelming” part out of the equation.

I’ll be posting updates regularly, but for now, it is time to head out for a Father’s Day dinner with my in-laws. I hope y’all are enjoying your weekend. I will be back later today to post about an “observation” my hubby made about me on Friday, and what the consequences were of that “observation.” Hang on to your seats, ‘cause it’s gonna be a bumpy ride! :-P

Havs

 

Welcome to my blog! June 9, 2006

Filed under: blogging,Personal updates — Hava Lyon @ 10:35 pm

I have to admit, I have never bogged before. I have heard about it, yes, on TV and on the Internet, but I haven’t read but perhaps 10 blogs in all my life.

So why am I starting my own blog, you may ask? Because I am a born writer. I have been reading and writing since I was a small child, and all through elementary school, I entered into writing contests. In junior high, I even won a whole $75 in a writing contest, and I was so proud of myself. The fame, the fortune, the money that was coming my way! I blew my entire wad on candy and was sick for a whole week.

Somehow or another though, on my way to even more fame and fortune than I had already acheived, life sort of got in the way, and I decided that I needed to find a “real” job, where I could make “real” money. Which I am currently doing. But despite the regular checks coming in, I have found that I still miss my creative side. Where else but writing could you be rewarded for telling the story exactly how you want to tell it, even if it isn’t exactly how it happened? In other aspects of life, this is called lying. In the writer’s world, this is called being creative. I like being creative.

So welcome to the world as Hava sees it. You may not love all my blogs, but I will surely love writing them!

Havs

 

 
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