Ninety percent

Well, it's been a month.

Things got off to a hefty start, what with work­ing dragon*con and all. I've given any­one who asked about the expe­ri­ence some ver­sion of the same response: "It was fun, but tir­ing." When I returned home from Atlanta, I very quickly came down with a case of the 'con crud, which wreaked havoc through­out my lungs for the bet­ter part of two weeks.

Dragon* Con 2011   
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On dragon*con 2011, and family

I've been home from Dragon*Con for a lit­tle more than a week now, and I'm still try­ing to fig­ure out how to describe this year. Like so many things, it was a hodge-podge of awe­some and infuriating.

The 'con is many things to many peo­ple. To me, it rep­re­sents more of a fam­ily reunion than any­thing else. I've always been an "out­sider" in that I live states away from some of the best peo­ple I've come to know over the last decade.

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Reflections on D*C 2008

This time last year, I was (very) seri­ously con­sid­er­ing not return­ing to dragon*con as a staffer. 2007 was a drain­ing, hell­ish year for the 'con and eas­ily the one where I enjoyed myself the least. There were large, intense prob­lems from minute one and the hits just kept com­ing. Every­one seemed to be strung out — men­tally and emo­tion­ally drained by the end, and I just wanted to go home. For being the one event I look for­ward to every year, that's pretty bad. I always told myself that if it ever got that bad, I would get out from under work­ing the con­ven­tion and just show up as a paid attendee.

I'm glad I chose to give it another try.

2008 was redemp­tion for me per­son­ally, and by all accounts it seems, for tech staff as a whole. We had our issues as we always do, but unlike 2007, we weren't con­stantly bar­raged with demor­al­iz­ing and hor­ri­ble events that hit one after the other like a destruc­tive wave.

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