Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Busy Month, still on the job search
I also have a couple job applications in and have an interview next week with Body Zone, so I'll think positive thoughts on that one. Zack got in trouble with the law last week. Stupid kid stuff. He was hanging out of a moving car - sitting on the window jam and the car got pulled over. He got a ticket for $235 including court costs. hope he learned a lesson. Expensive one...
Steph is still going to dental assistant school and seems to like it. another seven months she'll graduate. Yippee.
Deb is really starting to get busy and her income is gradually starting to reflect that. My online income is approaching 800 per month and that is passive income. Hope that continues for years and hopefully trending up.
Thursday, September 2, 2010
One Year Unemployed
Them "you worked there one day this year"
Me: "yes, if they need a lot of workers for a show, I am like 95 on the list"
Them: "and you're not working now because of lack of work?"
Me: yes, I guess. If they only called me once in a year, I guess they don't have much work.
Them: Do they intend to call you back?
Me: Maybe for a big show. I really can't say for sure.
Them: But you weren't fired
Me: No, It's like I'm a "stand by" employeee if they need a lot of people
Them: How much did you make? Did you make $3,000?
Me: for one day?
Them: yes
Me: If I made three thousand a day anywhere, I'd love that, but no.
Them: so you didn't make three thousand.
Me: no it was only one day.
Them:How much did you make?
(I was totally unprepared for this)
Me: I don't know. Maybe like seventy dollars.
Them: And are they going to call you back?
Me: I don't know
Them: Are you not employed because of lack of work?
Me: it was only one day, two months ago. I guess there's not a lot of work there. So I would say yes.
Them: and what about the week you worked for them last October.
Me: That was only two days. Maybe ten hours total.
Them: Did you make three thousand then?
Me: Um, no.
Holy Crap. And I've heard this called FUNemployment. It's not. It's torturous sometimes. Does anyone out there need a training manager. I'll work pretty cheap and I'm an OSHA authorized trainer..
Monday, August 9, 2010
HAHD Ezine Challenge
I am very pleased that I completed (and exceeded) the hundred original articles in a hundred days challenge on Ezine. To read some of my articles (or all of them) Click here http://ezinearticles.com/?expert_bio=Robert_Britt
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
You are a bridge
We are all bridges in life. Bridges for other people to get to where they need to go, or bridges for learning to help people learn what they think they need to learn, or maybe what you think they ought to learn.
Whether people appreciate you or not, remember that their success or failure was, in part at least, facilitated by what you did for them, and if, in your heart, you did what you did to help them, your efforts and thoughts will be rewarded. In the bible this is expressed as bread cast upon the water comes back tenfold. Or something of that nature. That's life.
Sometimes I feel like my efforts are unrewarded or un-noticed, and I have to remember that all things will come back to me in one form or another, and that I don't do things for the reward, but for the fact that they should be done and I am in the time and place and capable of doing them. That's all.
That is my beef with the christian heaven and hell concept. If christians (or religionists) do things because of the "reward" that is waiting for them in the afterlife, is that really behavior that is from the heart? It could be, but it is likely not. So if an atheist does a good deed for no reason but the deed was the right thing to do, is he more righteous than the person who expects reward in the hereafter? In the end it doesn't matter too much, just that the deed was done, I guess.
Monday, July 19, 2010
Stand-up Rob Britt
Here's a video of my stand-up. This was my first time doing this, and I was selected as the audience favorite. fun time.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Obama Landslide in 2012
The first event was the formation of the so called ‘Tea Party Movement.’ A group of people who rallied around the cry of back to basics and an adherence to the principles of the founding fathers decided to ignore the “all men are created equal” statement by allowing racist overtones to invade their platform. The racism wasn’t initially a part of the movement, but the denial of the racist component and the fear of ‘minority’ empowerment degraded the initial intent of the movement.
The documented proof of this racism occurred during a rally in Washington DC where a subset of the “Tea Baggers” were heard shouting the “N-word” at several members of congress who were African-American. Representative Barney Frank Also reported that members of the group called him a faggot. Rather than address this internal issue and publicly denounce the behavior it was blamed on the media and ‘infiltrators’ trying to disrupt the movement.
The second trigger event was the passage of Arizona SB1070 in early 2010, which was signed into law by Governor Jan Brewer. The law gave police broad powers to detain anyone suspected of being in the country illegally. The demand for “papers” from anyone potentially illegal brought to mind events in Nazi Germany. The obvious racial profiling seemed to be condoned by many on the political right.
A third group, separated by the above two segments because they belonged to no particular ethnicity was the GLBT (Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender) contingent. They also had, and have, continue to be pushed down by the far right Christian Conservatives who seem to have a death grip on control of the Republican party.
So this political entity, the Republican Party, allowed momentum of “anti-liberal” joiners to swell their ranks. But from those joiners the ranks became rank. Encouraged by the momentum that seemed to be building within the conservative movement there was no outcry at the radical elements who would have in other circumstances possibly been thrown to the curb.
A growing sentiment of elitism and racism within the party eventually united the people that they were trying to put down. The party of Lincoln (remember him) now was a group that brought racism into their fold, and from that empowered those people they felt would fold. The mistake awakened a sleeping giant.
African Americans make up 12.4% of the country. Hispanics make up 15.4% of the country. Non religious people make up 13% of the population. GLBT make up 4% of the population. 37% of the population are socially progressive white folks. Even with the obvious overlap this still makes a huge percentage of the population that isn’t buying into the hate.
Conservative media slammed ACORN for activism and registering voters who had been part of the oppressed minorities, but in the aftermath a purer voter registration group, the League of Women Voters saw a tidal wave of registration unlike any seen in the history of the country.
Sunday, May 9, 2010
It’s OK To Brag. “Aw, Shucks, Little Ol’ Me” Doesn’t Inspired Confidence

Yesterday I told my daughter that she was beautiful. As a father I may be a bit biased on that, and I can accept that. But it doesn’t diminish the fact that she is beautiful by standards other than mine. Yet she doesn’t take a compliment well, and I think that is a problem with a lot of people, me included.
Somehow the rules of our society make it almost a crime to say that something you did is praise worthy. That is a load of bologna. (To people not familiar with that phrase, it’s a polite way of saying it is BS) It’s OK to be proud and to speak of your accomplishments. It’s not OK to run them in someone’s face or to talk about them as a way of hogging the spotlight or putting other people down, but you worked hard to accomplish the things that you have done and it is just fine to claim them as your own.
I graduated from college with a 3.92 grade point average. It was a lot of work to maintain that average and I bypassed many opportunities of a social nature to make sure my work got done and that my papers and tests deserved the scores that they got. I am proud of that work and won’t hide it, but some people don’t even want to admit they went to college when they get into a certain atmosphere. “Oh, you’re a college boy, are you?” was a line of derision on an old TV show I used to watch and that attitude still pervades the manufacturing community to some extent. Hard core blue collar workers (my co-workers at one point) would deride me for taking classes at night. I was somehow sucking up to the bosses by trying to better myself. I never understood that attitude.
Although I have used my personal experiences as examples here, this isn’t about me. It’s about being able to take pride in a job well done and being able to say “Yes, that was me.” You worked hard to get where you are and it’s OK to brag. Not an “in your face” brag, but a standing tall brag. You don’t go into an interview and tell a potential client or employer how unworthy you are so don’t go into the world like that. Hold you head up and be proud of your accomplishments and yourself.
Next time you get a compliment don’t shrug it off; thank the person and take the compliment to heart. Don’t deflect it by returning a compliment, just relax and enjoy the glow it gives you. Use your gifts to make the world a better place and enjoy your place in it. You are a gift to the world and never ever forget that.
Oh, also working on a new website - Britt-Marketing go check it out. Thanks