Has the journey changed me?
In my job I keep receiving compliments and already three units are fighting for me at the university. It has not been like that before.
Have I changed after returning from Japan? Do my colleagues see this? I do not know what may be the answer. Although I have been working there for 9 years, I have received the requests of joining other units only in the past 4 months. Also, I keep receiving more and more demanding tasks as requests, connected to certain projects, and these tasks require throughout organizational skills and higher sense of responsibility.
Yesterday the other IT unit asked me to help them as a project assistant during the greatest project that is running now.
My current boss of course did not approve it - he brought up all kinds of reasons as explanation, but I think that the real reason may be that he is afraid of loosing me.
I am the most stable person at our department and if I left, the whole unit would crash after a few days (no joke and not being a bighead - it is a fact considering the present circumstances).
So I talked to the project manager girl and said I was sorry that this cooperation did not work out, but she said the battle is not over yet... I am wondering what they are planning...
In training...
I have been chatting a bit to a friend of mine this afternoon on Skype and I told him that I am actually grateful to fate for that things have happened the way they happened.
Since I shifted to another dojo, I managed to recognise some ancient bad habits and mistakes of mine which prevented me from developing my Taijutsu.
I managed to fix some of those mistakes also, which I knew about, and which I was struggling with for years, but have not been able to fix.
I thought I was simply hopeless because of the failures and because of all the critics that I used to receive from my former instructor, but now I think I was wrong.
My approach was wrong. Now that I practice on a different way I could fix these shortcomings, it seems.
Also, I noticed that I am learning much quicker, with more efficiency.
Probably it is because of the thought that I am "on my own" and instead of expecting an instructor to teach me everything that I need to know, it all depends on me now how much I develop my knowledge and skills or how much I let it degenerate and fade away.
It is me who has to work hard for it and it is not a second party pouring eveything in my head.
Yes, I know I should have looked at training this way even without this misery, but now that I am really on my own, only now can I see how true it is that everybody is practising for themselves.
I cannot help, I have always learnt the hard way :-)
There is no doubt that my ass got kicked in Japan and with this help I think I managed to get out of a deep pit that I have been trapped in since a few years ago.
A great thanks to the "responsible persons"!

