automattically awesome

The big news–starting next week, I’ll join the crew at Automattic as a Theme Wrangler!

(I’m not doing my own excitement justice with so few exclamation points, I know, but I’m trying not to look as dorky as I feel. ;) )

When Tim was hired by Automattic last summer, it was an eye-opener. I was about to have our second child and didn’t have much time to focus on a career shift at the time, but I knew my position at UMaine had stagnated and it was clear I needed a change. I’d spent the last three years working with WordPress, and I have a long history with web design and development, so that seemed the natural place to direct my efforts.

While on maternity leave, I focused on learning more about advanced WordPress development, particularly theme development, and I started applying to jobs, including a few at Automattic. In an effort to get better at code review, I joined the WPTRT (WordPress Theme Review Team). I also knew my portfolio was weak, so I set to creating and polishing. I built the kind of themes I would use–cute, illustrated, simple–and was thoroughly surprised when people actually liked them!

Tim encouraged me to apply as a Theme Wrangler, but I distinctly recall telling him, “Pssh. I don’t have that level of skill. I just draw pretty things and make them into themes, I’m not a theme developer.”

Several months later, Ian contacted me after seeing some of my themes and asked if I was interested in designing a premium theme for WordPress.com. I sent in another application around that time, thinking the extra visibility couldn’t hurt. When I finished the premium theme, I (tentatively, wincing all the while because I’m terrible a putting myself out there) followed up with Ian about my application, asking for some pointers… and was surprised when the response was positive. Not even three hours later I had a friendly chat/interview with Lance and started a trial contract that day!

I’m thrilled to be joining the Theme Team. Like I said in my previous post, I’ve worked at the same office for about nine years so this is a huge change. But I’m in a unique position because Tim is also an Automattician, and I’ve seen first-hand what’s involved with this type of job. I’ve also had the pleasure of working with my new colleagues for the last few weeks and that’s reinforced the fact that I’m in really good company. The work will be challenging, but that’s what makes this transition so appealing to me–new things to learn, new experiences, and a chance to work on some really cool projects with some equally cool people.

This means Tim and I will both be working from home. Some people look at me with raised eyebrows when I say that, but we’re not worried about this arrangement–we have separate offices (mine in our bedroom, his in the guest bedroom) in case we get sick of each other (haha) and we’ve worked together before. In fact, I imagine we’ll collaborate less at Automattic than we did at UMaine because we’re on separate teams. And I think it will make working almost entirely from home less isolating for both of us, while allowing more flexibility for our family.

And if all that wasn’t exciting enough, this time next week I’ll be on my way to Las Vegas for my first team meetup. I still don’t believe it. The last few weeks have been a whirlwind, and I’m eager to meet my colleagues in person, then hopefully get into some semblance of a routine and start the real work of learning the ropes. Wish me luck. :D

of bunnies and business trips

Tim is off on one of his many work adventures–this time to Boston for a week. After the last trip, I’m feeling surprisingly zen about it. I know I’m probably inviting disaster when I say that it can’t get much worse than a stomach virus, and given my track record it’s likely my car will betray me at some point, but… I’m a grown-up. I can do this.

In baby news, Gwen is almost crawling. CRAWLING. I’m not entirely sure when my youngest decided to grow up and be mobile, but there you have it. She’s discovered she can wiggle around the floor on her belly and get into all sorts of trouble–under tables and chairs, tangled in wires and cords, little fingers stuck into baseboard heaters. It’s childproofing time! (Didn’t we just go through this with Ellie? What is it about seemingly-happy infants that makes them heart-stoppingly suicidal, anyway?)

Snuggle bunny
I'm going to rename her "Scootch"
Binkeh!

She’s also developed a touch of separation anxiety. Mama is not allowed to leave the room. Hell, Mama is not allowed to be out of direct contact for more than a second, god forbid I put the child down once in a while. I’ve basically given up making her sleep in her crib this week which I’m sure will have painful consequences when Tim gets back, but oh well, Mama needs sleep.

Easter
Eggles
Doesn't every baby want an Easter Triceratops to call her own?
Bunneh!
Dye
Stickering up the eggs

We spent Easter weekend with my folks (they brought their new Roadtrek!) The egg hunt, decorating and baskets of goodies made for a fun time, but I’ve learned my lesson: Three years old is the point at which Serious Candy Negotiations begin. Given a choice, Ellie would have downed the entire basket in an hour. At first I doled out the candy like a responsible parent, letting her have a piece here and a piece there, usually after she’d eaten something more substantial (and by “substantial” I mean a bowl of cereal or a peanut butter sandwich–I’m not winning any nutrition awards these days) but by Tuesday I gave up and allowed her to eat what was left of her Robin Eggs (maybe twelve total) in one fell swoop. I should have saved my energy and done that in the first place. Better yet: Forget the candy, I’ll just buy toys next year. Good grief.

As for a health update, there isn’t much to say. I’m hanging in there. I’m down to 8k steps per day instead of 10k because of [insert excuse here]. I think once I’m settled at my new job I’ll be able to get into a better routine. Right now I’m just trying to get through each day without being a total slug. And don’t get me started on the amount of Easter candy I’ve consumed over the past three days… let’s just say I wish my mommy was doling it out piece by piece instead of letting me have the whole basket. I am not to be trusted around Easter candy.

The last month has been awesome and stressful. There’s a host of big changes on the horizon. Probably the most drastic change: I’m leaving the university at the end of April. Having been at the same office for almost 9 years now (if you include my time as a work-study student) this is a little sad, a little exciting, and a lot overwhelming. Where I’m going, that’s a story for another post.

general update, health and otherwise, february

My motto throughout February:  Balance.

This month has been really creative and productive, which is a nice change from pretty much all of last year.  Yay! I’ve spent a lot of time with my WordPress themes and my camera phone. I decided to get more involved with the WordPress Theme Review Team as a means of learning more about theme development, so I made it a personal goal to try to review at least one theme a week.  Then I picked up some freelance web development work. Then I was lucky enough to land a contract to design a premium theme for WordPress.com (!). Then I decided to build a whole new theme in one weekend, just for kicks.

One thing that makes me happy: That I have the ENERGY to even attempt a schedule like this on top of the usual daily life! But man, it does make it harder to stay physically active. I find myself saying it often: Why do all my favorite things–website design, photography, illustration, blogging–involve sitting at a computer? Oh, if only I could find sports enjoyable! But then I probably wouldn’t be fat in the first place, heh. I need to get a treadmill desk up in heah.

Anyway, that’s what I’ve been up to. I’m still keeping up with Health Month and walking/exercising regularly. I’ve also started watching calories a little more closely–not being super strict, just more mindful of my choices. Fitbit is forever my favorite motivator–case in point: my two birthday presents were a Fitbit premium membership from my parents and a (pre-ordered) Aria scale from Tim.

I’m happy to report I’ve officially lost 21 lbs since starting this process back in October. The weight started coming off in earnest about three weeks ago, and every time I step on the scale I’m surprised to see a slightly lower number. I keep expecting to plateau any day now, but for now I’m really happy with the results.

And as part of my reward to myself for another 10 pounds gone, I think I’m going to get my hair done. Not my usual “just a quick trim, thanks” done but a nice haircut and (probably? maybe?) some color. Yes, some color. Because, while I don’t mind looking a bit older than my age thanks to all this premature gray…

That's not the light playing tricks... I really am rocking the gray at 29

That's not the light playing tricks... I'm rockin' it little old lady style

… it’s been this way for years and I’m getting a bit bored. I’m genuinely curious to know what I’d look like as a brunette again.

this is the part where i torture you with more photos of my kids

Because this is my blog and, well, I just can. :)

Sisterly loveBig smilesMama's eyesPout

If you have to ask why there are so many more photos of Gwen than Ellie on Flickr these days, then you’re probably not parent to a hyperactive three-year-old. Most photos of Ellie are nothing more than a blur, because she gives me all of half a second to take a photo, stopping only briefly to yell “CHEESE!” before finding something infinitely more interesting than mama and her camera phone.

Gwen, on the other hand, is mostly stationary… at least for the time being. I don’t expect that to last for long, as she’s discovered rolling over allows her to get from point A to point Toy, albeit more slowly than she’d like.

giggles

I have a feeling we’ll see a lot more of this behavior in the upcoming years.