While my beloved laptop was at the menders I was pretty much forced to spend some time on my desktop computer which also happens to be my music computer, or at least it used to be before the main hard drive died towards the end of last year.
In case you are wondering I did have a back up of the data (Yes!!!!), but I didn’t have a full bells and whistles back up of everything so that it could be magically restored at the mere press of a button (Bugger it!)
I did have a new hard drive installed back then, but between my trip to London for the gig plus Christmas and the attendant merriment I didn’t really have any time to go into my studio, nor the inclination if I’m perfectly honest.
But with no lovely Powerbook and my fingers not nimble enough for blogging via the iPhone keyboard I resentfully tripped into the dark room with machines that (no longer) go ping to switch on the ancient behemoth that is my G5 and look at the pristine, vacant and virginal operating system and pray, fervently, that somehow I would be able to remember how to install all of my music software programs, make them speak to one another, and then get some sound out of the big silver box again so I could actually hear what was going on.
It turned out that this was really, really, really boring.
And actually quite hard, involving tedious reading of manuals, endless waiting on hold and then getting through to superior young men who spoke languages I didn’t understand -purportedly English but actually some kind of muso-technospeak that is a Klingon-Sound Engineer hybrid -whose ultimate message was that my computer was old (like me) and crap (prob. like me, too) and if I just spent a few hundred dollars more then I’d be able to buy something even more complicated and hard to understand but I’d be much cooler.
(But no, they wouldn’t help me install anything because that is not what Tech Support does, I could only speak to them once I’d installed something and had a problem with it.)
You know, I really liked it better before when I could go into the dark room with machines that go ping, just turn it on and it all worked perfectly and make peculiar noises and irritate my neighbours.
Even better, write tiny pieces of music and charge extortionate amounts of money for them. That was LIVIN’!
Harking back on those halcyon days reminded me that the reason I was enduring this computer hell was because I was trying to restart my company, and to that end, why didn’t I just do a little networking for a change of pace and try to drum up some new business?
That way, I reasoned, I’d have some more money, could buy some new, shiny stuff, and even better, I could hire my own Klingon to come and do all this for me.
I love delegating.
So, off to LinkedIn I went and had a look through my contacts.
Aha! There was somebody in San Francisco who had contacted me and expressed an interest in my work a couple of years back (BT – Before Two). I sort of dropped the ball on that one, but I could look him up, ask if he wanted to hear more about it and then say I’d be up in the Bay Area next month, which is actually true – I’m taking the children up to visit a friend – and tie it all in. Husband is planning to remain in Stepford, which is a bit sad for me as it will be over Valentine’s day, but he’s very tied up in an important work thing right now. Anyway, I digress slightly..
I sent my contact a nice, light professional email:
I hope the New Year finds you well.
You may remember we spoke briefly a couple of years ago on the phone about (my work) and were perhaps going to speak further if the opportunity arose. (The contact came through xxx. )
Would this be something you’d be interested in hearing more about?
I plan to be in the Bay Area in mid February and again in March and would love to meet with you if you have some time.
Otherwise, always happy to chat on the phone.Best
Mothership
About half an hour later I got a very nice response:
Great to hear from you!
Yes, I would be very interested in talking to you.
Let me know when you will be here and we can meet for coffee or lunch.
Send an email or call my mobile
I was very happy! I wanted to share this with Husband immediately. And although my friend would surely watch the children for me, perhaps I could inveigle Husband into coming up to the city with us by impressing him with my business go-gettingness (is that a word?) and then he could look after them and I could take some meetings and come rushing back to them all full of news and excitement about entering the real world again with the full support of my family followed by romantic Valentine’s dinner…
I forwarded him the correspondence with a note of my own attached:
Hurrah! Might NEED u to come 2 SF 4 valentine w/end now ;)) cunning plan…
And ten minutes later I got an email from my contact.
Cunning indeed. Let me know when you’re here.
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHH!
Just a bit embarrassing. I actually screamed out loud and went bright red when I saw that. It was a terrible, terrible moment and I could not sit still. Oh my GOD! How completely awful, although actually quite funny if it hadn’t been ME who was such a class A PRATT!.
I wrote back to him saying that I felt really silly, it had been meant for my husband and he wrote back saying he’d figured that out immediately but couldn’t resist the humour. He very kindly said he’d had a mixup like that recently where he’d sent an email to a colleague he’d meant for his wife and the colleague had been pretty put out (I wonder what he said?) so I wasn’t the only one, not to feel bad.
I can only hope that this means we’re on a more *cough* human footing – it certainly broke the ice. But every time I think about it I STILL want to plunge my head into a bucket of ice water and scream.
However, I reason that this was a baptism of fire. I have now made the first contact and with that made a total arse of myself, so I shan’t bat an eyelid at cold calling and dismissive rejection, deciphering Klingon/Engineerspeak will be a mere bagatelle and installing awkward music software on the wind-up G5 is going to be a palpable relief.
Onward and upward.
Please feel free to share with me your own communication *ahem* errors. (this is a polite way of BEGGING)
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