Tuesday, December 13, 2005

Two Months Leave

Two Months Leave
2005.12.09 2:24

It's been already more than two months since I quitted my second job, now my conditions are fully restored, now it's time to work somewhere again.
Currently I am just working around 35 hours per week, I hope I work more 15 hours per week.
Really 'No pain, no gain.' I have neither time to spend extra working hours nor time to watch TV. I am just OK, but now I am rather humble person. I find new job whatever to seek for an new encounter, findings, insight into the nature of humans, besides making more earnings. Let's go.
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Time(Score:2)
by Shadow Wrought (586631) on 2005.12.09 2:53 (#14211865) (http://slashdot.org/~Shadow%20Wrought/journal Last Journal: 2005.12.10 2:55)
While Ic ertainly don't have the time for a second job, I hve oftent hought that, maybe after retiring or if my conditions change, that it would cool to work in a retaraunt. The kind where they encourage you to chat with the customers and build a bit of rapport. Whether I would still be wanting to do it after a couple weeks or months though, is an entirely different question;-)
--...why write about writing when you could be writing what you write, right? -- Me.[ Reply to This ]
Re:Time(Score:1)
by mercedo (822671) * on 2005.12.10 2:17 (#14220832) (http://slashdot.org/~mercedo/journal/109855 Last Journal: 2005.12.13 0:12)
About fourteen years ago, we had only two or three foreigners' bars in downtown, now they are more than five -doesn't make big difference though, and I always visited one of them called 'The Big Apple'. The premises are very small with only ten seats available, but with also a small hall they had always twenty strong people inside the bar. Sometimes that exceeded thirty and we sometimes had troubles as fist-fighting, sexual harassment, molestation, pick-pocketting, but also we had nice conversations and instant love affairs. We all complained about the smallness of the bar and scarcity of its kind in town, but it was still in early 1990s. Foreigners are not so common as they are now.
There I kept on visiting for 210 consecutive days, I mean for seven months. Every night I made it a rule to come to the bar at as early as 7, then stayed up until 5. I usually stayed there for 7 or 8 hours talking to guys and gals from inside and outside Japan. Actually all my -4 loves, including ex-, post-ex-wifes, a current love, a former love are from foreigners' bars. I mean they are great places to brush up your thoughts, but now the days are gone. I prefer sitting in front of the screen rather than dancing in the hall, but if you are young enough, I strongly recommend dropping in at the bar where you can know the world directly from your eyes, noses, ears, hands, and body.
I had worked both in a bar or cabaret and a restaurant before. To vist a bar is very ammusing but to work there is very different from vising as a guest. I had to always put myself in a third person position. I was far from enjoying the ambience there. That is mere my experience or observation there, why not try working?

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