Get me outta here!

MissMeliss.com

I make stuff up…and collect dogs.

Menu

Skip to content
  • About MissMeliss
  • Bibliotica
  • Bathtub Mermaid Podcast
  • In Print & Audio
  • Contact Info & Comments Policy
  • Privacy Policy

Author Archives

MissMelisshttp://www.missmeliss.com

Messages and Memes

19 February 2006 by MissMeliss

Message:

HAPPY BIRTHDAY RAINBOWBINKY.

MissMelysse will have to write:

I will not be charged with conspiracy to overthrow the monarchy again

'What will you have to write on the chalk board?' at QuizGalaxy.com

Splashes

Is My Blog Burning?

9 February 2006 by MissMeliss

My good blog-friend Laura, who is an American living and cooking in France, turned me on to a fun activity called Is My Blog Burning, that made me think of several of the folks I read here.

The current challenge is French peasant food, which is why I'm making Cassoulet for eight people in a week and a half. I'm cheating a little, and using chicken instead of duck, goose, or partridge, but other than that, I think it'll be fine.

Anyone reading this is invited to participate.

Splashes

Goodbye Xenobia

5 February 2006 by MissMeliss

Once upon a time, in a time so long ago that 14,400 was considered a fast modem speed, a young woman named took her first steps on the internet, or at least, her first steps that weren't limited to a specific interface and a few email messages. At the time, she used the name “Zenobia” because she liked the way it sounded, and because it was the name of a character in a favorited childhood story that had been illustrated by Edward Gorey. Also, she'd been told single women shouldn't use their real names on the 'net.

Years past, and she clung to the id in a fashion that really was a bit ridiculous, but then, she's always been a bit of a collector (witness her shelf full of hat boxes some time), so perhaps this is not surprising.

Finally, one morning,more than ten years after she received that 14,400 modem – and (thankfully), on much-improved technology, after she'd had a restless night following a pretty productive day, she woke up and decided that it was time to let the last remnant of “Zenobia” go. Ironically, the last remnant wasn't even a direct remnant, as much as a distant relative, since it was spelled with an X, and all. (Someone had the nerve to have “her” name when she joined LJ, you see.)

But, as a child of the 1970's, this woman had been given a name that was extremely popular for girls just a little younger than her – girls who had been born during the early days of a tv show called “Little House on the Prairie,” which had featured TWO Melissa's among its cast. (But the heroine of our story was born before that, and is proud to say that she wasn't named after any television performer, but after an ingredient in shampoo.)

And so, after more than 10 years of being known as “Zenobia” (or one of its derivatives), she is finally closing the door on that identity.

Translation: “Xenobia” has been changed to “MissMelysse” (since both “Melissa” and “MissMeliss” are already taken, and I've flirted with spelling my name with a 'y' since I was seven).

Further information: As LivePress doesn't work in the current incarnation of WordPress, my actual blog can be found at . I hope you'll read it, but do understand if you don't.

Splashes

Happy Friday

21 January 2006 by MissMeliss

I have three minutes before I have to leave for work, and wanted to dash this out. I'm wearing jeans today. I've never really been a fan of jeans, having found that they're not particularly comfortable especially if you fidget a lot, and they're totally gross if you get wet from rain or snow…but with the return to corporate America “casual Friday” has become a miniholiday, and since we're allowed to wear jeans, I've been doing so.

And finding that I quite like them. Today, for example, I'm wearing them with my favorite black boots and a charcoal sweater designed to look like there's a white blouse underneath. It's comfortable, and just dressy enough for casual friday at BigFinancialCompany.

This week has seemed a month long, partly because I was stuck in a training class, and partly because attending the class has skewed our schedule just enough earlier to be uncomfortable. I'm eager to return to my cushy 10-7 shift on Tuesday.

May everyone have a blissfully happy Friday, and a wonderful weekend.

Originally written at 7:41 AM.

Splashes

Locked Work Update

20 January 2006 by MissMeliss

So, if you're not on my Christmas list, you might not know that the company where I've been working since 12/12/05 is CitiFinancial Mortgage, which is the subprime division of CitiGroup's mortgage branch. I spent the first 10 days without computer access, because even though I work for the largest financial institution in all creation…the umbrella company so iconic that their logo IS an umbrella (yeah, okay, they stole that from Traveller's, but, hey…), the fact that I was hired during the holiday season, and in the middle of a stage by stage move (all the Dallas ops divisions are moving from scattered campuses to one big campus in Irving) meant that they couldn't manage to create a login for me.

So I spent a lot of time stacking files, and bringing files to underwriting, closing, audit, or escrow, which, if nothing else, forced me to meet everyone. And I mean EVERYONE. They may have taken ten days to give me computer access, but they're all so amazingly friendly…it's very cool. The people I didn't meet by wandering around being helpful came to my desk and said, “You're the newest processor on S's team, right? Welcome!”

Finally, the day after Christmas, I had access, and they threw me into processing. I think I scared our supervisor a little when my first four files came back with no underwriting stips (conditions). But, you know, in a good way. By the 7th of January, I had 10 submissions, two closings, and two declines (I'd never have sent them TO underwriting if I'd had the option not to, on those). And somewhere along the line the two male underwriters started calling me “Famous.” Well, first it was, “So, you're the famous Melissa,” and then it was shortened to just, “Hi, Famous.”

On January 11th, I was pulled away from the team and my pipeline to attend a month-long training class. If you've never done any processing before, or only a little, it's a good class. The trainers are upbeat, bright, funny, and generally nice people. It's not their fault they have nothing to teach that I don't already know. Really. But it's a requirement, and they welcome input, so I've been trying to balance being helpful with not showing off. Thankfully, they understand the need to be occupied, so they provided each of us with a bunch of pipecleaners, koosh balls, plastic slinky-like things, and small tubs of play-dough (the substance, but not the brand).

Yesterday, our training class ended at 3:15. The trainers can't release us from the building before 4:30, so we were sent to our managers, who, for the most part, said, “Enjoy the ability to bail while you can.” I pointed out that I was meeting Fuzzy at six, so had time available if there was anything to be done. (They know how bored I've been in this training. Not that the trainers aren't wonderful, marvellous people, but…out of the twenty people in my class, 5 are wholesale, 2 are ALP, and the other 13 are consumer direct. The five of us who are wholesale processors have oodles of mortgage experience. The ALP women use completely different forms and software than we do (ALP = Alternative Lending, they're the people who get our loans when even we can't do them), and the consumer direct people are all green, green, green.

So, for the first week of class, as we did things like spending an entire day learning how to read an appraisal (no, I didn't actually murder anyone. Really.) And on Monday and Tuesday they paid us – and I'm not making this up – to play Hangman to fill the last half hour of the day. ANd the whole time I've been politely telling anyone who asked “How's training going?” that the class is very good, if you don't already have oodles of experience.

Anyway, back to yesterday. I mentioned I had time to kill, they said, “Really??? Well A's alone on your team right now. Can you get two files done by the time you need to leave?” And I said, “Of course.” So I was given two files to process, and was done with one and 90% done with the other when we had to go. I came in early this morning to print the last few pages, and carry it to underwriting, and on the way back my manager stopped me and said, “So, about your training?” And I said, “Yes?”

“You're done as of tomorrow,” she told me.

“Oh?” I asked, trying not to jump up and down with glee.

“We need you on the floor, and you know what you're doing, and the underwriters say you don't make mistakes.”

“I try not to,” I said. “I don't like stips. It's like a game – how few stips can I get?”

She laughed, and said, “Exactly. Clearly you have a lot of knowledge, and it's being wasted. And I know you'd rather earn bonuses than play with clay.”

“Um, well, it was magenta clay, at least,” I said.

“So, you're finishing MAGIC (customer service stuff – it's FUN – it's ROLEPLAY!) tomorrow, and then you're back on the team on Monday, while everyone else does two weeks of software training.”

“THANK YOU!” I said.

So, yeah, I'm kicked out of training for knowing too much. Although, I'm going to ONE day of software training so I can learn the broker-engine in a training environment without my phone ringing, and have the opportunity to ask questions about some of the fields I'm not sure of in the main processing software. Still, two days is WAY better than two weeks.

Which brings us to this evening. I went to my desk to find out about my two files, and they were both approved. “Do you mind sending out the approvals before you go?” my manager asked. And of course I didn't. As I was working on them, my favorite underwriter, the one who gave me the name “Famous” walked by and asked how training was. I gave my spiel about the trainers doing their best to keep it interesting, and he said, “No. I mean, really, how is it for you?” So I told him, and he said, “Yep, thought so.”

I thanked him for the lack of stips on my file. He grabbed the folder and threatened to add some, “just cuz I've been too easy on you.” And we talked for a while about Citi's underwriting philosophy, and how they tend to be conservative with income but generous about credit burps.

“I want your job in a year,” I told him.

He said, “Totally possible. Talk to our manager A. She'll make sure it happens.”

I'm TIRED, but I'm really really happy about this decision to work for Citi. Really happy.

Splashes

Observations on a Windy Winter Morning

19 January 2006 by MissMeliss

The sky outside my office window is delicate this morning, like pale blue silk swirled with cream. Even though the sun is up, it isn't fully daylight, and a wash of pink shrouds the world the way a bridal veil hides one's face. For a moment, all is still, the space between breaths, and then the quiet morning is blown away, quite literally, buy the wind that comes whistling through the trees sounding like a steam engine's stuttering whistle as it pushes past the cracked-open windows of my house.

The wind seems to be a prairie wind just now, of the sort that both Willa Cather and Laura Ingalls Wilder both wrote – ceaseless, constant, almost a being in its own right, alternately a howling monster and a whispering stranger, a brutal enemy or a caressing lover. Last night, tucked into bed with small dogs pressed against me, the wind was a comforting sound, easing me down into the waves of sleep.

This morning, though, the bluster is sort of hollow. In another life, one as recent as two months ago, I'd be staying home, making tea, writing in bursts like gusts of wind. Instead, I'm dashing out this blog entry, and heading to Starbucks for a triple venti latte and (because my mood calls for it) a butter croissant, on the way to work.

At work, with doors that encourage you to step through them in digitally devised pseudo-female voices heavily laced with the gentle tone one uses when addressing the criminally insane, and windows that allow us to see the world from behind their hermetically sealed panes of tinted glass, the wind is left outside. There is no breeze, no taste of outside, just stale office air, recycled, re-used, reduced to something LIKE actual air, but not quite IT.

And the wind is left outside.

Splashes

188991

17 January 2006 by MissMeliss
Splashes

Sometimes, I hate handling the finances.

17 January 2006 by MissMeliss

When we moved back to California from South Dakota in 1998, I opened an account with BofA as the bank we were using in SoDak had no branches west of the Rocky Mountains at the time. I've never particularly liked anything about them, other than their tendency to be pretty much everywhere.

When we moved to Texas, we opened a local BofA account, because BofA California and BofA the rest of the world are on different computer systems, and while the ATM cards let you withdraw from any machine, you cannot deposit into a California account from a Texas ATM, etc.

But now I work for a really big financial institution, and as employees are given spiffy perqs like free accounts with instant overdraft approval and features one generally has to have constant, large balances for, for free, and as I've just spent far too long fighting with BofA's customer service (and I use that term in the loosest possible manner, as really, they wouldn't talk to me (even though they always have before) because Fuzzy's name is listed first on our checking account, and therefore the ID linked to the online account is his, nevermind that the man has to ASK ME what his ss# is, most of the time), I'm actually considering moving banks, even though we have so much stuff on autopay that it will be a total hassle.

So I'm seeking your input, because all of you are intelligent, net-savvy folks with a range of patience with customer service that pretty much brackets my own. Tell me about your bank? Not details, of course. And do note, I am doing other sorts of research as well, I'm just curious about what you love and hate from a customer standpoint.

And yeah. Comments are screened. Poll Follows under separate entry.

Splashes

Wired. Wordy. Wrambling. Um. Rambling.

17 January 2006 by MissMeliss

It might be the result of a triple venti (nonfat) cinnamon dolce latte consumed while doing countless “high cost loan” worksheets during the afternoon training session today, or it might be due to the storm front that has finally arrived (although we've only gotten minimal rain), cooling and moistening the air, if not the earth, but I'm antsy and wired today. I came home (after a post-work dinner with Fuzzy, and a post-dinner trip to buy cute office supplies) considering taking the dogs out even though it's full dark. It's only eight-thirty, actually, and our neighborhood is pretty safe, so I might, still.

I haven't felt at all energetic in a while. I've felt both bored and boring, dry, stale, stagnating. I've jotted some stuff in my new moleskine, but the pretty journal is largely unadultered by my messy scrawl, and I haven't been near a computer long enough to compose anything.

I've surfed a few blogs, but I have no focus for blogging right now, more interested in waiting til I decide where I want to go with the blog this year. I know that things will change once I'm back on a schedule more suited to my normal sleep patterns, but, like Kate in the fluffy but cute “Kate and Leopold,” I'm already feeling that Sundays are tainted by having to go to work on Monday, though it's not that I don't like my job (hate the training, but like the actual job), as much as the HAVING to be there. If it were optional, even if the option was psychological, I wouldn't have to fight this trapped feeling, and wouldn't have to endlessly, silently, internally chant, “It's not forever, and it doesn't define you.” (I've put that in the blog often enough now that it should be obvious this is a real issue.

I don't post about the day to day stuff at work, because it's work, and I've always tried to keep work out of my blog. Always. It's too dangerous not to. I'm not good with euphamisms, or cute blognames for real places and people, so if I tell anything it will be everything, and that's just really unwise.

I wake up in the middle of the night and feel suffocated. I like the money, but I don't like having to have a schedule. I feel like there's never enough TIME, and I don't like living this way. I'm losing my sense of balance. I haven't written or IM'd with certain people who mean much, and give much, and I feel bad, but there's just no time, or when there IS time, the energy is wrong.

*Breathe*

It's only been a month.
I have to give it time. Find a rhythm.
Remember to breathe.
Yeah.
That.

Splashes

Don’t even ASK if it’s pulp free…

14 January 2006 by MissMeliss

A friend at OD mentioned hearing a radio discussion about a chair with a built-in juicer that is apparently all the rage at strip clubs. So of course I had to google it. . . let's just say, it brings a whole new dimension to the notion of “fresh squeezed juice”.

Splashes

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

I said…

  • Caffeine Theology
  • The Collector of Lost Chords
  • Salt Logic
  • Apples From the Sky
  • Somebody Save Me

You said…

  • TBM-Mirror Mirror: Day Thirty-One | The Bathtub Mermaid on Mirror Mirror – Day Thirty-One
  • MrsHallWays on Mirror Mirror – Day Thirty-One
  • TBM-Mirror Mirror: Day Thirty | The Bathtub Mermaid on Mirror Mirror – Day Thirty
  • TBM-Mirror Mirror: Day Twenty-Nine | The Bathtub Mermaid on Mirror Mirror – Day Twenty-Nine
  • TBM-Mirror Mirror: Day Twenty-Eight | The Bathtub Mermaid on Mirror Mirror – Day Twenty-Eight

Frequent Landings

  • A.M. Moscoso
  • Animos Bones
  • Becca Rowan
  • Bev
  • Bozoette
  • Debra Smouse (life coach)
  • Debra Smouse (personal)
  • Eaten Up
  • Humanyms
  • Kisses & Chaos
  • Loose Leaf Notes
  • Mexico Musings
  • Oggipenso
  • Pearl
  • Penny Luker
  • Rhubarb
  • Super Librarian
  • Thursday 13
  • Unconscious Mutterings
  • Where's My Plan?
  • Written Inc.
  • WWdN
  • Zenzalei

Archives

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
November 2025
S M T W T F S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30  
« Oct    

Categorically

  • 2018 (28)
  • 2019 (27)
  • 2019 (31)
  • 2020 (8)
  • 2020 (26)
  • 2021 (26)
  • 2021 CreativeFest (3)
  • 2024 (11)
  • 28 Plays Later (93)
  • Basil and Zoe (8)
  • Covid Metamorphosis (7)
  • Daily Drabbles (1)
  • DDOQ (7)
  • Elseblog (43)
  • Essays (1)
  • Fiction (38)
  • Flash Fiction (76)
  • Flash Prompt (1)
  • FlashFiction (30)
  • FlashPrompt (13)
  • From the Vaults (14)
  • Holidailies (156)
  • Holidailies (2004-2007) (65)
  • Holidailies (2007) (31)
  • Holidailies 2008-2012 (26)
  • Holidailies 2015 (14)
  • Holidailies 2016 (5)
  • Holidailies 2017 (5)
  • Holidailies 2018 (22)
  • Holidailies 2019 (10)
  • HorrorDailies (114)
  • HorrorDailies 2016 (20)
  • HorrorDailies 2017 (24)
  • HorrorDailies 2018 (31)
  • HorrorDailies 2019 (4)
  • HorrorDailies 2023 (7)
  • Like The Prose (64)
  • Mermaid Meditations (1)
  • MermaidAdvent (3)
  • Mirror Mirror (32)
  • MusicAdvent (3)
  • Ocean of Flavors (75)
  • Reality Writes (2)
  • Reality Writes 2019 (2)
  • ReMythed (1)
  • Remythed (1)
  • Sasha and Martigan (1)
  • Short Shory (33)
  • Short-short (5)
  • Splashes (2,220)
  • Sunday Brunch (2)
  • TLC Alumni (1)

Connect with MissMeliss

November 2025
S M T W T F S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30  
« Oct    

You said…

  • TBM-Mirror Mirror: Day Thirty-One | The Bathtub Mermaid on Mirror Mirror – Day Thirty-One
  • MrsHallWays on Mirror Mirror – Day Thirty-One
  • TBM-Mirror Mirror: Day Thirty | The Bathtub Mermaid on Mirror Mirror – Day Thirty
  • TBM-Mirror Mirror: Day Twenty-Nine | The Bathtub Mermaid on Mirror Mirror – Day Twenty-Nine
  • TBM-Mirror Mirror: Day Twenty-Eight | The Bathtub Mermaid on Mirror Mirror – Day Twenty-Eight

I said…

  • Caffeine Theology
  • The Collector of Lost Chords
  • Salt Logic
  • Apples From the Sky
  • Somebody Save Me

Archives

Frequent Landings

  • A.M. Moscoso
  • Animos Bones
  • Becca Rowan
  • Bev
  • Bozoette
  • Debra Smouse (life coach)
  • Debra Smouse (personal)
  • Eaten Up
  • Humanyms
  • Kisses & Chaos
  • Loose Leaf Notes
  • Mexico Musings
  • Oggipenso
  • Pearl
  • Penny Luker
  • Rhubarb
  • Super Librarian
  • Thursday 13
  • Unconscious Mutterings
  • Where's My Plan?
  • Written Inc.
  • WWdN
  • Zenzalei

What I’m Reading: Bibliotica

Review: Death of a Billionaire, by Tucker May

Review: Death of a Billionaire, by Tucker May

For a first novel, Death of a Billionaire is remarkably polished, deeply entertaining, and packed with personality. I turned the final page already hoping this is only the beginning of a long writing career for Tucker May.

Review: Hummingbird Moonrise by Sherri L. Dodd

Review: Hummingbird Moonrise by Sherri L. Dodd

Hummingbird Moonrise brings the Murder, Tea & Crystals trilogy to a satisfying close, weaving folklore, witchcraft, and family ties into a mystery that’s equal parts heart and suspense. Arista’s growing strength and Auntie’s sharp humor ground the story’s supernatural tension, while Dodd’s lyrical prose and steady pacing make this a “cozy thriller” that’s as comforting as it is compelling.

Review: The Traveler’s Atlas of the World

Review: The Traveler’s Atlas of the World

It’s a celebration of curiosity — of countries we know by heart and those we might never reach, but can visit here, one breathtaking image at a time.

Review: National Geographic The Photographs: Iconic Images from National Geographic

The Photographs rekindles that same sense of wonder, distilled into one breathtaking collection. Across more than 250 images, National Geographic’s legendary photographers remind us what it means to see — truly see — our planet and ourselves

Review: Narrow the Road, by James Wade

Review: Narrow the Road, by James Wade

  About the book, Narrow the Road Genre: Southern Fiction, Literary Fiction, Coming of Age Publisher: Blackstone Publishing Pages: 306 Publication Date: 26 August 2025 In this gripping coming-of-age odyssey, a young man’s quest to reunite his family takes him on a life-altering journey through the wilds of 1930s East Texas, where both danger and […]

Tag!

28 Plays 2018 28 Plays 2019 28 plays 2020 28 Plays 2024 28 Plays Later 29 plays later 100 Words All Things Girl Basil and Zoe Bathtub Mermaid Cafe Writing christmas coffee Creepy DogDaysofPodcasting Dog Days of Podcasting dogs Flash-Fic Flash-fiction Flashfic FlashFiction Flash Prompt Ghosts Holidailies Holidailies 2008 Holidailies 2013 Holidailies 2014 Holidailies 2015 HorrorDailies Horror Halloween Like The Prose Like The Prose 2019 lists Mirror Mirror Mirrors music nostalgia Reflections summer Sunday Brunch Thematic Photographic Thursday 13 Thursday Thirteen weather writing

Categorically

  • 2018 (28)
  • 2019 (27)
  • 2019 (31)
  • 2020 (8)
  • 2020 (26)
  • 2021 (26)
  • 2021 CreativeFest (3)
  • 2024 (11)
  • 28 Plays Later (93)
  • Basil and Zoe (8)
  • Covid Metamorphosis (7)
  • Daily Drabbles (1)
  • DDOQ (7)
  • Elseblog (43)
  • Essays (1)
  • Fiction (38)
  • Flash Fiction (76)
  • Flash Prompt (1)
  • FlashFiction (30)
  • FlashPrompt (13)
  • From the Vaults (14)
  • Holidailies (156)
  • Holidailies (2004-2007) (65)
  • Holidailies (2007) (31)
  • Holidailies 2008-2012 (26)
  • Holidailies 2015 (14)
  • Holidailies 2016 (5)
  • Holidailies 2017 (5)
  • Holidailies 2018 (22)
  • Holidailies 2019 (10)
  • HorrorDailies (114)
  • HorrorDailies 2016 (20)
  • HorrorDailies 2017 (24)
  • HorrorDailies 2018 (31)
  • HorrorDailies 2019 (4)
  • HorrorDailies 2023 (7)
  • Like The Prose (64)
  • Mermaid Meditations (1)
  • MermaidAdvent (3)
  • Mirror Mirror (32)
  • MusicAdvent (3)
  • Ocean of Flavors (75)
  • Reality Writes (2)
  • Reality Writes 2019 (2)
  • ReMythed (1)
  • Remythed (1)
  • Sasha and Martigan (1)
  • Short Shory (33)
  • Short-short (5)
  • Splashes (2,220)
  • Sunday Brunch (2)
  • TLC Alumni (1)

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Something Fishy by Caroline Moore.