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I stayed in the industry so long, at least early on, in order to afford a housing payment, rent, a car payment, credit card bills, etc. but after first one company and then the next went bankrupt and the years kept adding up, I faced the truth that I was: 1) thankful my boss kept finding me (and a few others) a new place to hang our hats; 2) scared to jump off into the unknown - because I knew I had to get out of the business for the sake of my soul; and 3) unwilling to deal with the harsh truth that I would be making significantly less wherever I went. Eventually, I did take leave, heading back into the slightly less treacherous world of non-profits, which I had prior experience in. I may not have defaulted on my loan or been foreclosed on, or had to declare bankruptcy, but through my actions I threw myself into the insane cycle, taking advantage of a deal simply because it was too good to be true, rather than asking myself if it was the best thing or the right thing. Second revelation: Being an unreconstructed English/cinema studies graduate, I tend to be a bit obsessive-compulsive about matters of grammatical accuracy in general, and particularly in relation to movie titles and quotes. Stray or additional articles of speech or mangled lines of classic dialogue send my spell-checking brain into overdrive. Every time Clint Eastwood’s 1992 Oscar-winning western has been referred to as The Unforgiven or David Fincher’s 2002 home-invasion thriller is tagged as The Panic Room, I bemoan the lack of good copy editors (and simultaneously wonder if it’s all part of some outreach program to find good homes for wayward words).
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