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Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

I’ve Been Memed

June 12, 2007 by Tracee Sioux  
Filed under Parenting

pink-hair-blog-flat.jpgI was tagged in a blogger game or memed by Julie Q at The JQ Lounge.
Each player starts with 7 random facts/habits about themselves. People who are tagged need to write their own blog with their 7 things as well as these rules. You need to tag 7 others and list their names on your blog. Remember to leave a comment for them letting them know they have been tagged and to read your blog.

1. I was raised a Mormon Military Brat. We moved a lot, as a result I could pick up and go at any second. For a job or out of boredom I have sold everything I owed to relocate as an adult four times already. I am only 33-years-old.
2. I am a journalist by profession. I resent my previous employers for not allowing me to work from home when I became a mother. I am a writer and since the invention of e-mail there is really no reason to make me come to the newsroom 40 hrs a week. I think it’s “motherism” as my employer allowed a man to work out of his home but denied my request. I’ve not found my female employers any more supportive of working from home than my male bosses. But, I do resent them more.
3. I got married when I was 17-years-old. That was a stupid thing to do. I totally believe in divorce and thank God every day that by 19 I was smart enough not to make my childish mistake a permanent one. I didn’t marry again until 27.
4. After my child-bride experience I found that I was unwilling to change my name back to my father’s name and unwilling to keep my ex-husband’s name and unwilling to take any future husband’s name. I went to court and dropped all the last names that made my identity relational to the men in my life. I decided to have an identity that did not change with my marital status. My given name at birth was Tracee Sue and I thought Sioux would look better in print – well, I AM a writer so it DOES matter how marketable my name is. I was only 19 when I divorced so it seemed inevitable that I would eventually get married and have kids again. But, it did not seam reasonable at all to change my identity in any way, including my last name. So, I am Tracee Sioux. Legally now and forever. It is not a nom deplum – Sioux is my legal last name and it is who I am.
5. I witnessed 9-11 when I was 8 months pregnant with my first child. I was on my way to work. What strikes me now about the experience is that as a reporter my first instinct was to buy a disposable camera and report on it. I got a shot of the second plane hitting the building. I wasn’t close enough for anyone to buy the shot. The second thing that sticks with me is how worried I was that I was going to be late for work and how my boss might be annoyed with me – as if for the first few hours the shock was so complete that I didn’t understand the magnitude at all and went about my normal business like buying a chocolate donut.
6. I went to Lithuania after college to teach English, I wanted to travel and had been a political science major with an interest in the breakdown of the Soviet Union. Lithuania was a brand new democracy.
7. I’m grateful beyond belief for my current opportunity to work from home blogging. I feel like this is a “calling” for me. I’m pretty intensely spiritual about my So Sioux Me website and my work at b5media writing BlogFabulous to empower people and especially women. It’s my path, my personal legend, my way of being part of the soul of the world, my way to affect the collective consciousness.

So I’m tagging Therapydoc at Everyone Needs Therapy, Steve at Inside Fatherhood, Karen at Thrifty Mommy, Cory and Kerri at Marriage Actually, Kate at Babylune, Karen at Live the Power and Courtney at Courtney Tuttle. Consider yourselves Memed by Tracee Sioux at So Sioux Me and BlogFabulous.

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Comments

4 Responses to “I’ve Been Memed”
  1. Mark Evans says:

    Glad to see you’re enjoying your working from home gig so much! When I was a journalist, I always found it puzzling why my editors were against the idea of working from home given I had all the tools (phone, Internet access, computer, etc.) to do the job. No wonder newspapers are struggling to stay vibrant!

  2. Tracee says:

    Mark,

    I always found it ironic that I would be writing crap about how “virtual work arrangements” were catching on – while I was forced to be at the office to write it.

    The last straw for me was attempting to email the editor my story at about 11 pm after a night city council meeting (after I’d already put in more than 8 hours physically in the newsroom writing). She was pissed that I had gone home to write it and emailed it in rather than come back to the newsroom.

    What the hell? I haven’t seen my kid since I dropped her off at daycare this morning and you MUST have me in an empty newsroom to write a story about some pot holes?

    I guess I’m still pissed about it. It’s just so corporate BS! Virtual job and working from home just seems like a whole lot of empty lip in my experience. Writers and reporters should be the prime example of flexible working arrangements as we’re out interviewing all the time rather than in the office anyway. However, I found all of my editors completely unreceptive to the idea.

    Tracee

  3. Mark Evans says:

    Well, no one has ever accused newsrooms of being progressive. :)

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