bookmark_borderAnother question from from “How Far Will You Go”

Q: What’s the worst thing you have to do each morning?

I’m not a morning person. The hardest part of any morning is getting out of bed. I’m fine after I get me feet on the floor. But getting there is hard. The snooze button is my friend and my enemy. A few pushes and I feel like I got away with something … but a few more and I’m late for work which throws my whole schedule off.

Q: What turned out to be the most useful course you ever took in school?

Not typing. I can’t type well at all. I never learned how to type properly and I doubt I ever will. I use only about half of my fingers and — except for the most common keys — I have to glance at the keyboard. This is not too much of a problem since when I type (at work and home) I’m thinking about what to write as I go, so I don’t need to speed type as I can’t speed think about what I’m writing anyway. I type about as fast as I write so it’s okay.

It is bad news, however, if I need to retype something. I avoid this as much as possible and use my scanner and OCR (Optical Character Recognition) software as work around. A good typist could probably input a page a lot faster than it takes me to scan and read a page but this works for me.

Since I write things for a living (and do meet my deadlines) my lack of typing finesse is sometimes surprising to others. When I was diagnosed with RSI, my friend K. (who has seen me type) suggested I take in my computer keyboard to show the doctor my “crazy typing”!

How fast can I type? I was tested about fifteen years ago and I managed 32 words a minute.

Getting back to the question… 

I’m not sure what course was the most useful. I can think of many that I really enjoyed or were very interesting but not one that really stands out as the most useful.

Not family studies, since I can’t cook or sew very well. Not math since I dropped it as soon as I could. Probably it was the first writing course I took in university or maybe it was economics — which I almost failed — because it was enlightening to understand concepts like supply and demand and opportunity cost.

bookmark_borderreading stuff and trying to read other stuff

Today I finished reading “Fish” by T.J. Parsell. It was raw, brutal and honest.

I have several other books on my shelf about prison culture and crime, racism and the abandonment of the working class. I find these topics very interesting. I can’t pretend to understand what it might be like to not live in a privileged environment but these books help me look at the world outside my middle class comfort zone.

Speaking of books, I’m only on page 55 of the novel I need to finish for my book club next week. Good thing I’m a fast reader. It would help if I liked it more but it’s still early. I need to give it more of a chance. I’m going to stop procrastinating and finish it before I start on some other books in my queue that I bought while ago, including I Have Chosen to Stay and Fight by Margaret Cho.