I am now registered for the Fall at MCC. 13 credits to start, but I may see if I can cross register to take Japanese I at U of R. Thing is, after so long of not being in school, even a 13 credit week is looking sooooo full. At least one of the classes is Career and Life Planning, and another is Stress Management.
I'm actually taking Photography I. It's neat - thanks to
I'm also taking an introductory graphic design class to see if I wouldn't mind heading in the visual communication direction. Since the Asian history and literature classes were either not offered this semester or not at an appropriate time, I got in a History of Reincarnation class. That should be interesting. I've taken a lot of world religions and philosophy classes, but never one with so narrow a topic.
Anyhow, it was definitely a plus getting to meet some folks in the Career Center, and getting to know my way around a little bit. Leave it to me to gravitate toward the Art building in my head even though it was Aidan who proclaimed that we ought to go see building 12. I have a feeling I may not be able to escape that side of me. That, or I just feel a kinship with that part of any college campus since I've taken so many art classes myself. Then again, I remember finding my way towards Tyler Hall at Oswego even when I was just hoping to gain access to the piano practice rooms...
I'm seeing some definite patterns there. The questions are: Can I find some direction in it? Can I narrow it down to working towards a career? This time I want to be really be ready to graduate when I do. I want to be prepared to be employable.
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Sorry I could not be there.
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As far as employability, there are three kinds of photographers: press (magazine, newspaper, etc.), fashion/glamour/porn, and freelancers (home portrait studios that dabble in the other two areas when contracts/offers come along). Only one of which is exactly profitably hiring, and I think you can guess that one.
I found a lot of my love of the art actually came from darkroom work which is almost extinct in commercial photography outside of strictly artistic pursuits - chemicals are a recurring expense whereas a highend graphics workstation once purchased will do the job as long as the juice is on. There are some things no matter how you try that can't be duplicated on a screen - maybe it's the aura that comes from a hand-developed photograph.
Hope this helps and didn't confuse the issue further. *hugs*
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Cool!
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Re: Cool!
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What does your schedule look like?