Being the anal-retentive type that I am, I got up way too early this morning to make sure that I got to my interview on time. I had checked the York Region Transit website for the bus schedule, and knew that I had to be at Finch station by 11 to catch the bus that would get me to the Cybermation office by noon (11:35, actually, I think). So just in case the subway got stuck in a tunnel between Lawrence and York Mills, I got up at 9 this morning and got out of the apartment at about 10. Everything went smoothly, and I actually arrived at the office around 11, so I sat and read a magazine until the manager interviewing me came out and introduced himself.
The interview was actually done with the entire team - five people, one of whom I had trouble understanding as he had a thick Eastern European accent. What I want to know is why interviewers always pick some obscure item out of my resume to ask me about - a project that I worked on five or ten years ago, and don't remember that well? And then they ask questions that focus on parts that I wasn't even actually involved in... argh.
Though I was amused at the end when one of the guys said, "I noticed something interesting in the Volunteer and Other Interests section of your resume... the Toronto Historical Bowling Society. What's 'historical bowling'?" I had to admit that I had no clue why the league is called that. He was under the impression that we used antique equipment. I think he's seen that Pro-Line commercial one too many times. (For my non-Canadian friends, Pro-Line is a sports lottery. Their current ad shows a hockey coach in the dressing room, saying to the team, "The owner thinks we should go out in 'throwback' jerseys." The owner then says, "Not just jerseys, Jimmy - throwback everything. The team is then shown to be getting creamed in their antique equipment, much to the delight of a guy who bet on the other team.)
So, I'm not sure how they felt about me. I thought I did well on the questions about my approach to testing software, but not so well on the questions pertaining to my past projects that I can barely remember.
I called the headhunter when I got home around 3, and got her voice mail, so I left a message, then I headed over to the clinic to have them take a look at my elbow. They finally called me in at 5:30. First a nurse asked me to describe the problem, then ten minutes later the doctor came in and asked me all the same questions (fortunately, in between the nurse leaving and the doctor arriving, I discovered a copy of Time magazine from last October that had an article about all of the recent discoveries of planetoids in the outer solar system, so I wasn't too bored while I waited).
The upshot is, the doctor thinks I have tendonitis. He gave me a prescription for an anti-inflammatory and a referral to a sports medicine clinic in the area, and suggested that I ice my elbow a few times per day. (Ice? How? My fridge came over on the ark, and my freezer isn't frost-free, and I can barely fit a can of juice concentrate and a couple of packages of pork chops in there. Ice cubes are out of the question.) He said that if I'm feeling okay on Tuesday, he doesn't see any reason for me to have to skip bowling next week. However, if I'm still in pain, I may have to take a week or two off. :(
Anyway, the arm is still quite sore - I was having trouble reaching the back of my neck again today, though I can get to it now. I hate pain.
After seeing the doctor, I went to First Thursday, back in its original location of The Foxes Den (1075 Bay Street, for anyone who's interested - hey
hoskie, what happened to you? I thought you might show up tonight). Dinner was good - corn chowder to start, linguine with chicken, mushrooms and spinach in a tomato cream sauce, and cookies-and-cream cheesecake for dessert. Throw in two pints of Rickard's Red, and it was about $31 (before tip).
I'm exhausted now. I may be in bed by 1:30. Problem is, I still haven't read today's newspaper... I really dislike it when the papers pile up.
Oh, but before I close, two things of interest from today:
Tulsa Pastor Arrested On Lewd Conduct Charge - apparently the Southern Baptists believe in "do as I say, not as I do."
And
John Barrowman is getting married, though he doesn't believe in using the word "marriage" for some reason. Bang goes that fantasy. ;)
Oh, and Space is currently showing Enterprise's season-four Vulcan Reformation arc - it just seems wrong for Surak to be played by the same guy who played George Schickel on QAF. I don't need images of Surak's naked butt going through my head, thank you very much. (For that matter, I don't need images of Bruce Grey's naked butt going through my head, either. Blame CowLip for that.)