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BPAL Madness!
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More change!

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spanishviolet

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So I have done it. I turned in my two-week notice at Borders yesterday. In two weeks I will begin my new job at a bankruptcy firm, assembling packets of some kind. Goodbye $0.17 raise, hello more dollars!

 

I feel guilty about leaving the store when the cafe is already critically short-staffed, but I won't miss spending all my time in the cafe (I like the books!), and I definitely won't miss the part where Seattle's Best grades you on making conversation with the customers. (Can't I just be distantly friendly & make their coffee quickly?) And I'll never have to train anyone on Borders procedure again. Still ... even after only two months at the new store, there are a couple of people I will miss a lot. And of course my discount ... perhaps at some point I can work part-time on weekends. But for now, Borders will very soon be me-less, which is disorienting after so long (six and 2/3 years!). But I am adaptable, and I will prevail.

 

I find it deeply ironic that after listening to Jason complain so much about my unpredictable retail schedule & never having weekends off & my not making enough money & etc etc, I am leaving the retail world when it is too late to help out that relationship & will in fact now have to spend all those free evenings & weekends finding ways to stay away from the house while he & Jamie are in it. But moving time is very soon now, & then I'll be free. And my new officey hours will benefit me because I'll never have to worry about how late the last bus goes by again. And on holidays, I'll do ... whatever non-retail people do on holidays ...

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Congratulations! :wub2: :wub2:

 

I worked for a bankruptcy attorney in Ohio before we moved here. Bankruptcy is very interesting -- one of the big benefits for me was "waking up" and really becoming hyper-aware of our own finances, from seeing the messes people will get themselves into. Obviously some people couldn't help it (illness, divorce) but others were so willfully oblivious.

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Congratulations! :wub2: :wub2:

 

I worked for a bankruptcy attorney in Ohio before we moved here. Bankruptcy is very interesting -- one of the big benefits for me was "waking up" and really becoming hyper-aware of our own finances, from seeing the messes people will get themselves into. Obviously some people couldn't help it (illness, divorce) but others were so willfully oblivious.

 

Thanks! :wub2:

 

I hadn't thought of that, but I bet it will be a very useful wake-up call. Hopefully in time to do some good - I'm kind of oblivious myself, but trying to do better. So this will provide not only more money, but also financial-sensibleness-motivation ...

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