I have been applying for jobs for many months now, and finally something of substance came through. About 3 weeks ago I carelessly applied for an entry position as a equity settlement analyst with a major global bank. It was not a grad scheme, just an entry level job. I said carelessly, because I had only downloaded my CV and my university transcripts, forgetting to submit a cover letter. Amazingly enough, I got a call 3 days later inviting me to the interview. I had been very nervous and prepared thoroughly for it. I picked up my course books which had started to collect dust and reviewed all there was about global equity markets, what derivatives are and what the major kinds of them are. I had prepared answers for all potential competency based questions against the expected behavioral framework of the company, as well as brushed up on my technical knowledge. I also found a website explaining the processes of clearing and settlement, so that I had an idea of what the job entails before the interview.
I was sat before two men and ten minutes into the interview I suddenly felt I was not nervous anymore and in control of the situation. It flowed smoothly from then on. I never once had to refer to my notes. My answers were to the point, brief but rich, delivered at the right pace in a fairly fluent manner. I did not kill the point by talking endlessly about the same accomplishment as I know I may have done in past interviews, not did I go "eh, eh... let me think".
At the end I was asked some practical questions such as booked holidays, and a very surprising one "What is your salary expectation". Well, that was one question I did not prepare for and I staggered. I asked what the band was and there was no band, however I was told not just to pluck a figure out of thin air. I was aware it was an entry position, but I was also aware it was in the global markets department, aka, in investment banking, and everyone knows these guys rake in a lot. I went for "low 20s" and that's what they wrote down.
The interview was on Friday and on Monday I got a call at work. I dared to answer it where my manager could not see me and it was someone from the bank calling to say I did very well on my interview, that the two men were impressed and that they're offering me the position! I was so insanely bugged out freaking ecstatic that I thought I was going to levitate or combust into some unknown matter, I wanted to jump and scream and cry the tears of joy! I sat at the counter, leaned back and let out deep breaths of satisfaction.
So today I dropped off my signed contract and I hope to start in about a month's time. Things are FINALLY working out for me, after so many years of shitty, low-paying jobs where I was treated like a half-wit and patronized by middle management, asked to behave in a way which was contrary to my values and expected to follow idiotic sometimes procedures. Oh yes, this is the first job where I can wear my own clothes instead of a moronic patronizing "corporate wear" (prison-like) uniform. I will not miss my previous jobs a bit, though I will miss a few people I met there.I will be based downtown and work in a large office.
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Friday, September 9, 2011
Friday, July 22, 2011
Midsummer pauseToday we are all Norwegians
Today we are all Norwegians. Nopt only were several bombs detonated in Oslo but some gunman opened fire at a youth camp on a Norwegian island.
Other than that I've started gym again this week, had a week long break because of man-flu. Feels good to be pumping again. A lot has happened since I last wrote, one of the things being some interesting job interviews. My general well being has lifted considerably and I think it is safe to say I am out of the woods.
Other than that I've started gym again this week, had a week long break because of man-flu. Feels good to be pumping again. A lot has happened since I last wrote, one of the things being some interesting job interviews. My general well being has lifted considerably and I think it is safe to say I am out of the woods.
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Break after a storm
Funny how the events in the Middle East & North Africa have paralleled my own emotional state of events. It was matched on nearly daily basis and only in the begining of March have I been able to feel remotely normal and muster enough energy and faith to make such a simple thing as this blog entry. Not that the mess I'd created in my life has been properly resloved, but at least I seem to have reached a point of temporary emotional stability where I'm not in pain all the time, every day, the result of which was an inability to focus on my work and daily tasks. In Egypt the situation in clear, things have returned to normal, but in Libya, they're still battling it out. I'm sorry to report but at the moment my life is Libya. I'm grateful for the friends that I have, they are the rebel army trying to win over the rest of the country in grips of an evil dictator.
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Post exam curiosities...
The exams are over. For now. Last Friday I had an important exam. They piled us into the gymnasium-turned-examination hall, and began distributing the tests. Just minutes before nervous students were frantically revising outside, filling their short term memory with information that will evaporate as soon as they leave the room. Sometimes I'm truly amazed at the bullshit that comes out of my pen during exam time. How do I manage to become this creative to fill out pages and pages with volumes of pseudo-intellectual garbage barely held together by a flimsy skeleton of random half-accurate references? This particular exam was no different, I wrote unceasingly from the beginning till the end. One excercise was numerical in nature, and though my accounts did not balance - I think I did ok overall. I hate those people who when asked how they did say "I did horrible" and then they get an 80. If you know you did well, say so, don't pretend to be a victim.
There was a man in the examination hall. Suited & booted, tall, broad shouldered, caucasian with features that kept my looks off my paper for a while and could easily get him featured in a Marlboro commercial. He was one of the professors at the school, although I never had any classes with him. He manouvered his way around the desks, checking with exceptional dilligence and scrutiny whether any of us dared to bring forbidden aids to the exam. He squinted at pencil cases, picked them up, examined them in his large hands and put them on the floor. The stern and serious look never left his face, and when he made a short announcement the tone of his voice commanded attention and carried authority. After the exam, when we were still seated at our desks waiting for the papers to be collected, my attention was redirected to him automatically. People were beginning to chat to one another comparing answers, as they would, and I just sat there, relieved to have finished and mesmerized by what I was witnessing. The head professor made a request for everyone to stay seated and be quiet. The invigilator started approaching individual students who were chatting and telling them to be quiet. I watched every step he made and observed his facial expression with such intensity, aware that the moment would soon end. The level of frustration in his narrowing eyes grew and grew as students continued to chat in various scattered locations and he was obviously unable to stop this slowly increasing murmur. He however kept on swiftly walking from desk to desk, from group to group, persisting on telling as many people as possible not to converse and each time it was done with more fervor, impatience, frustration and intensity. He was becoming like some crazed charicature of an evil professor from a Pink Floyd song, and oblivious to anyone but me, he was approaching boiling point. Everyone else was distracted, but I was held prisoner, frozen by this momentary inconspicuous spectacle. Two seats in front of me a Chinese girl started chatting in to her classmate. The prof leaped over there from nowhere, like a large cat, stood over her, stooping down so that his eyes, just inches from hers became frighteningly intimidating, his expression furious, and he spit out loud enough for everyone to hear "you, shut up!" It was incredible. I found that whole moment so extremely exhilirating and was captivated by it. It's taken me a day and a half to shake it off. It was such an intense experience, and yet all I did was watch passively. in the end he finally gave up and walked away from the students, over to the examinator tables and began counting the exam papers, burning off steam.
Later I found out about that man. He is an author of one of the best selling and widely used textbooks on investment & finance in the UK & the world, he is a doctor, and predominantly works with PhD students. To watch a person of such esteemed status and position feel so powerless was incredible.
There was a man in the examination hall. Suited & booted, tall, broad shouldered, caucasian with features that kept my looks off my paper for a while and could easily get him featured in a Marlboro commercial. He was one of the professors at the school, although I never had any classes with him. He manouvered his way around the desks, checking with exceptional dilligence and scrutiny whether any of us dared to bring forbidden aids to the exam. He squinted at pencil cases, picked them up, examined them in his large hands and put them on the floor. The stern and serious look never left his face, and when he made a short announcement the tone of his voice commanded attention and carried authority. After the exam, when we were still seated at our desks waiting for the papers to be collected, my attention was redirected to him automatically. People were beginning to chat to one another comparing answers, as they would, and I just sat there, relieved to have finished and mesmerized by what I was witnessing. The head professor made a request for everyone to stay seated and be quiet. The invigilator started approaching individual students who were chatting and telling them to be quiet. I watched every step he made and observed his facial expression with such intensity, aware that the moment would soon end. The level of frustration in his narrowing eyes grew and grew as students continued to chat in various scattered locations and he was obviously unable to stop this slowly increasing murmur. He however kept on swiftly walking from desk to desk, from group to group, persisting on telling as many people as possible not to converse and each time it was done with more fervor, impatience, frustration and intensity. He was becoming like some crazed charicature of an evil professor from a Pink Floyd song, and oblivious to anyone but me, he was approaching boiling point. Everyone else was distracted, but I was held prisoner, frozen by this momentary inconspicuous spectacle. Two seats in front of me a Chinese girl started chatting in to her classmate. The prof leaped over there from nowhere, like a large cat, stood over her, stooping down so that his eyes, just inches from hers became frighteningly intimidating, his expression furious, and he spit out loud enough for everyone to hear "you, shut up!" It was incredible. I found that whole moment so extremely exhilirating and was captivated by it. It's taken me a day and a half to shake it off. It was such an intense experience, and yet all I did was watch passively. in the end he finally gave up and walked away from the students, over to the examinator tables and began counting the exam papers, burning off steam.
Later I found out about that man. He is an author of one of the best selling and widely used textbooks on investment & finance in the UK & the world, he is a doctor, and predominantly works with PhD students. To watch a person of such esteemed status and position feel so powerless was incredible.
Sunday, January 9, 2011
An Intense Day in Arizona
Last night a US congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords (D) was shot, and 6 other people killed in Tuscon, AZ. I reacted to this unusually strongly. I know a family who lives in Tuscon, a family that I love. They are actually Republican, and pretty conservative, but they are also loving, accepting and intelligent. We've been arguing about the appropriate responses to this tragedy as we tracked the progress of Giffords in the hospital via the news. I have spent some wonderful times with them when I lived in the US. Yes the killer was a mentally disturbed nutter (but wasn't also Hitler?) and he did not mention Sarah Palin in his rants. But he was certainly from the anti-establishment, anarchist fringe of the political spectrum. I don't think it will be as easy to separate this incident from the hate-filled political spirit that's been interwoven in the recent Republican, and especially Tea Party's rhetoric. I don't think Palin's unfortunate metaphorical references to "reload, aim and fire" uttered a last year before the election bear any real responsibility for this shooting. However, I do think the Tea Party's gone too far and it's hijacked the Republican Party way far to the right. And what's up with the gun laws? The case for liberal gun laws states that since law abiding citizens carry guns, it is safer to walk on the streets, knowing some law-abiding Joe will protect you with his Ruger 9mm semi-automatic when you are attacked. Really? Where were the law abiding gun carriers during the shooting of Congresswoman Giffords and 6 other people, including a girl born on 9/11? How come they didn't materialize? Is it because when there is a terrorist attack of this sort people don't think clearly and panic? Is it because people need special training to take down criminals, special training which allows them to think clearly in a highly emotional and disturbing situation?

I am upset at the thought that it could've been someone I know in that crowd. I am also upset at how easy it is to get a gun, go out and shoot at politicians. But I am also upset that the American right wing has the audacity to defend its rhetoric and attempt to turn this around and blame the other side! Hello? A liberal got shot! So what that the killer was a 22 year old nut, he chose to kill a Democrat, not a Republican. Perhaps he found comfort in the Tea Party calls to abolish this government and took it as a personal responsibility? Aditionally, Sarah Palin's little map of targeted Democrates, who DARED to support Obama's healthcare reform bill, featured crosshairs on the locations where these Democratic reps live. Correct me if I'm wrong but the only place you normally see crosshairs are gun scopes, not maps. Gabrielle Giffords was one of the targets on the map. One down, nineteen to go?

I am upset at the thought that it could've been someone I know in that crowd. I am also upset at how easy it is to get a gun, go out and shoot at politicians. But I am also upset that the American right wing has the audacity to defend its rhetoric and attempt to turn this around and blame the other side! Hello? A liberal got shot! So what that the killer was a 22 year old nut, he chose to kill a Democrat, not a Republican. Perhaps he found comfort in the Tea Party calls to abolish this government and took it as a personal responsibility? Aditionally, Sarah Palin's little map of targeted Democrates, who DARED to support Obama's healthcare reform bill, featured crosshairs on the locations where these Democratic reps live. Correct me if I'm wrong but the only place you normally see crosshairs are gun scopes, not maps. Gabrielle Giffords was one of the targets on the map. One down, nineteen to go?
Saturday, January 8, 2011
trying not to panic
This morning my group, the group that insisted I be the leader of, brought on a major scare. The quality of the work submitted was really below my even mild expectations! Seriously, this is a Masters degree, esseys should contain references. Only one member showed up, and this is a guy who hasn't been with us from the beginning. He's Vietnamese and I'm really glad he came because he seems to be taking this seriously. I've been poring over financial statements of various banks and I feel like a forensic accountant already. I am still not even halfway done with my part of the assignment. I've agreed to take on the hardest part, the comparative case study, because I reckoned that if I end up doing most of the work I will only end up beneffiting from this experience. Meanwhile, yes I guess I am benefitting but I'm also stressing out because I haven't even begun revising for the dreadful corporate finance exam this Friday. That's in 5 days. Anyway, I better get back to work.
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Looming deadlines
Today I finished my small dissertation. I only have to apply the cosmetic changes such as double space it, and arrange the references so they don't look so random. I also got an ok from my new boss to book another trip to Poland towards the end of the month. I'm going to see Tony and be with him for 5 days - a prospect that really fills me with joy & excitement! We have spent so little time together since our reunion. We'll have a great time together. Tony's birthday is coming up - I must remember to send a card tomorrow. One of my worst social iniquities I have ever committed was forgetting his birthday one year. He was so disappointed and hurt and I felt so self-absorbed and guilty...
I have an exam on the 14th in corporate finance, which will definitely be the hardest exam I will sit this course, then accounting on the 18th, and group project to be handed in by the 20th... I must plan carefully to be ready for it all. Today I also made a new friend - but I will write about that later.
I came across this little animation today from my friend in Sweden. Its profound in its simplicity and logic. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DmerYYdJDv0
I have an exam on the 14th in corporate finance, which will definitely be the hardest exam I will sit this course, then accounting on the 18th, and group project to be handed in by the 20th... I must plan carefully to be ready for it all. Today I also made a new friend - but I will write about that later.
I came across this little animation today from my friend in Sweden. Its profound in its simplicity and logic. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DmerYYdJDv0
Saturday, January 1, 2011
Happy New Year 2011...women and the gay scene...
2011 feels like a lot, it's a brand new decade. My new years eve was pretty ok, nothing extraordinary. I dined alone in a Thai restaurant, which was slightly weird, as I was the only sole diner, but there was a table full of Americans nearby who filled the restaurant with enough of friendly banter, which was pleasant to listen to.
Then I hit Canal Street and that was my first time partying there, and well, it wasn't bad. I made friends with a Muslim guy called Ali in a low grade karaoke pub (Charlies..?). We both started laughing at some exessively behaving guy who was dancing to crappy karaoke music and then almost knocked Ali off his feet as he stumbled upon him. Ali was a nice guy, who of course wasn't out to his family. I just have to say I have very little respect for people of the young generation living in the West who aren't out. Yes, I'm aware of that powerful hold family can have on a person but seriously, we have one and only one life to live and if you're going to go through it lying to your family, you're not even respecting them, you're deceiving them. It's better to face their anger and a possible, but most likely temporary, rejection from the clan, than keep a phony peace built on a lie. Anyway, my new friend was 37 and just an average guy who was into coke. As far as I knew he snorted 3 lines. He didn't feel so hot later and I worried about him. Even offered me some, but I declined. Thanks but no thanks, I would never take hard drugs, god only knows what kind of internal damage they do to the brain, lungs, and all your cells. The street was full of people and it finally looked the way it did on Queer As Folk. It was fun to be there just that night and experience it seething with nightlife, clubbing and music. Nevertheless, I have become a rare visitor on the scene which is probably Alan's influence. He would feel so vindicated with the decision to end it with me if he knew I went to that forbidden, cursed, unholy place!
Note to straight females: I'm sorry if the following offends you but tough.
The scene was ok overall, my immediate complaint was with the amount of straight women there. Not that I have anything against straight women, but when it comes to the gay scene it seems like there are more of them than there are gay men. And I can distinguish the lesbian women from the rest. Some with friends, some with their boyfriends. Seriously hags, aren't there enough straight clubs for you? Do you have to take over our skimpy little scene as well? Do you have to pollute it with your loud, ill-mannered behavior? With your bleached blond hair, skinny or fat exposed legs, hoop earrings, overdone make-up, loud annoying squeaky high pitched, bellowing laughter hitting my eardrums so bad they want to bleed, clutching your little handbags and wearing skimpy dresses making you look like you actually forgot to get dressed, even if it's arctic freezing weather outside... I mean it, hags, stay away, you're not welcome there, and we only put up with you cause we have to. You make the street look chavy, trashy and cheap, and in case you forgot, since we can't go to 99% of the clubs to meet & have fun with other men, the scene is there for gays and lesbians, not hen dos and "normal people" wanting to experience an exotic evening with the freaks.
Ok, got that out of my system. Ali, my new friend, took me to the Eagle Bar which was so much more to my liking than the youth-filled Queer, or even the more sophisticated Velvet Bar. The Eagle was for real men, bears, muscles, moustaches and guys over 50. It was yummy there, and that's where I did the countdown and as midnight struck I drunkenly kissed some bear and wished him and then Ali & his friend a happy new year. Ali's friend joined us, whose name I don't recall. It was a guy who has a daughter, also Asian, and a lot more effeminate. He had slightly long hair and was acting like a woman for the most part. Nice enough. So after midnight I talked to 2 more people and walked home. I'm glad I did, there were just too many men for my liking there. Tony called on the way and we chatted for a while. I miss him a lot and I told him this must be the last New Years Eve we are apart.
At home I had an "Edward & Bella" marathon, watching Twilight, New Moon and Eclipse. Love that stuff, it was such a great hangover cure. That and Panadol Extra.
Then I hit Canal Street and that was my first time partying there, and well, it wasn't bad. I made friends with a Muslim guy called Ali in a low grade karaoke pub (Charlies..?). We both started laughing at some exessively behaving guy who was dancing to crappy karaoke music and then almost knocked Ali off his feet as he stumbled upon him. Ali was a nice guy, who of course wasn't out to his family. I just have to say I have very little respect for people of the young generation living in the West who aren't out. Yes, I'm aware of that powerful hold family can have on a person but seriously, we have one and only one life to live and if you're going to go through it lying to your family, you're not even respecting them, you're deceiving them. It's better to face their anger and a possible, but most likely temporary, rejection from the clan, than keep a phony peace built on a lie. Anyway, my new friend was 37 and just an average guy who was into coke. As far as I knew he snorted 3 lines. He didn't feel so hot later and I worried about him. Even offered me some, but I declined. Thanks but no thanks, I would never take hard drugs, god only knows what kind of internal damage they do to the brain, lungs, and all your cells. The street was full of people and it finally looked the way it did on Queer As Folk. It was fun to be there just that night and experience it seething with nightlife, clubbing and music. Nevertheless, I have become a rare visitor on the scene which is probably Alan's influence. He would feel so vindicated with the decision to end it with me if he knew I went to that forbidden, cursed, unholy place!
Note to straight females: I'm sorry if the following offends you but tough.
The scene was ok overall, my immediate complaint was with the amount of straight women there. Not that I have anything against straight women, but when it comes to the gay scene it seems like there are more of them than there are gay men. And I can distinguish the lesbian women from the rest. Some with friends, some with their boyfriends. Seriously hags, aren't there enough straight clubs for you? Do you have to take over our skimpy little scene as well? Do you have to pollute it with your loud, ill-mannered behavior? With your bleached blond hair, skinny or fat exposed legs, hoop earrings, overdone make-up, loud annoying squeaky high pitched, bellowing laughter hitting my eardrums so bad they want to bleed, clutching your little handbags and wearing skimpy dresses making you look like you actually forgot to get dressed, even if it's arctic freezing weather outside... I mean it, hags, stay away, you're not welcome there, and we only put up with you cause we have to. You make the street look chavy, trashy and cheap, and in case you forgot, since we can't go to 99% of the clubs to meet & have fun with other men, the scene is there for gays and lesbians, not hen dos and "normal people" wanting to experience an exotic evening with the freaks.
Ok, got that out of my system. Ali, my new friend, took me to the Eagle Bar which was so much more to my liking than the youth-filled Queer, or even the more sophisticated Velvet Bar. The Eagle was for real men, bears, muscles, moustaches and guys over 50. It was yummy there, and that's where I did the countdown and as midnight struck I drunkenly kissed some bear and wished him and then Ali & his friend a happy new year. Ali's friend joined us, whose name I don't recall. It was a guy who has a daughter, also Asian, and a lot more effeminate. He had slightly long hair and was acting like a woman for the most part. Nice enough. So after midnight I talked to 2 more people and walked home. I'm glad I did, there were just too many men for my liking there. Tony called on the way and we chatted for a while. I miss him a lot and I told him this must be the last New Years Eve we are apart.
At home I had an "Edward & Bella" marathon, watching Twilight, New Moon and Eclipse. Love that stuff, it was such a great hangover cure. That and Panadol Extra.
Labels:
2011,
Canal Street,
drugs,
fag hag,
gay,
gay scene,
New Years Eve,
party,
straight women gay scene
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