posted 1 year ago
I worked help desk as an undergraduate student. My first year of grad-school, I was a "research assistant" but really, I designed and delivered computing-related courses (I mostly taught (very early -- it was 1995) HTML and Photoshop). Then I was hired into the management team of that same helpdesk that I came up in. In the summer of 1999, we moved away and I got a job in a Fortune 100 Network Operations Center, doing systems analysis and datacenter cabling. There, I started dabbling in software just to build tools to help the organization -- a shift turnover log, a PTO calendar, web slideshow about the datacenter, etc. Since then, I've been a coder, doing mostly VB.NET and SQL (various flavors, but now it's mostly been TSQL) for like 22 years. Two years ago, part of the company I worked for was sold to another company and we operate as an independent company, so IT was radically downsized and I've been picking up a lot of sysadmin duties. (I took five programming courses as electives in college, but I wasn't ever a CS student and my degrees are in technology education.)
I work 100% remote, as does my wife (technical writing, project management, but also IT), so we figured we could move to the country -- which we've always wanted to do. Since our youngest was nearing the end of high school, we waited for that, and then jumped. But I had bought the main Mollison book when I first heard about it, back when it was fresh, though I still haven't read all of it. But as a result, "permaculture" has been on my mind for a long time. I was a hobby-scale grower of chiles when we lived in town, and had had small gardens at previous houses. So I was hovering adjacent to this way of life for a long time. Witnessing the destruction of physical environment and ideals, that I hold dear, it feels like I *have to* find another way to get by with a lighter touch on the land. Permaculture is the best mental framework for that as far as I know.
It doesn't feel like there's a connection between these two aspects of my life, but maybe I'm just not seeing it. And in some ways, my tech life holds me back from really diving into my stewardship of the land because I can't figure out any land-based way to generate income that would come *anywhere near* what I bring down as salary. (#goldenHandcuffs #firstWorldProblems)