A mixed bag

Mar. 6th, 2006 01:22 pm
lnr: Halloween 2023 (Default)
[personal profile] lnr

Illness: It's frustrating to have lost a second weekend in 3 weeks to being ill. It started about 3am on Friday night/Saturday morning with me coughing until I threw up, a not entirely uncommon experience with this cold. Only this time I didn't stop, and threw up again at 4, 8, 9, 10:30 and 12, having got very little sleep inbetween. I spent most of the rest of Saturday asleep. Sunday I risked eating again without any bad effects but found I couldn't actually finish either meal, despite them being nice. Very strange. I'm still coughing - seems to hit about 3 hours after going to sleep and wake me up pretty reliably. As a result I'm pretty tired. But hey, I'm not throwing up, and I lost weight :-)

Injury: My finger seems to be healing OK. The slight bleeding on first changing the dressing was down to a tiny ooze the next day and not at all since. I've still got a plaster over it, partly just a reminder to be careful, partly to hide how ugly looking it is.

Strike: I'm going to be on strike tomorrow, as part of the AUT's action in protest over pay settlements. See AUT press release, BBC article, UCEA release. Personnel have said we won't be paid for the strike day, or for any day on which we take part in Action Short of a Strike. The latter covers mostly things which won't affect me anyway (assessment boycott, no call-outs, appraisal boycott, not covering for absent colleagues), but I'll still be nominally taking part. I feel I should get involved in picketing but somehow reluctant and I'm not sure I can put my finger on why. At leats partly just fear of the unknown. Will try and at least make myself go to tomorrow's lunchtime rally. I feel like I'd be letting my mum down amongst others if I didn't.

Friends: A friend needs a bit of support at the moment having got themselves into a bit of relationship doom. My instinct is to tell them to get well out of it, but of course that doesn't stop them being hurt in the process. The same old stories played out again with minor twists and new characters. Surprisingly despite it giving me the opportunity to mope over my own relationship messes I seem to be doing OK.

Overall: I just want today to be over so I can go home and *sleep*.

Date: 2006-03-06 03:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] artela.livejournal.com
As someone who will be potentially affected by lecturers taking part in "action short of a strike", I'm interested to know why academia seems to regard itself as a special case for pay rises when most people I know in the private sector have been getting much lese than inflation rises for years :-(

Date: 2006-03-06 03:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keirf.livejournal.com
It's the lousy situation in the private pension sector that's really biting though.

Date: 2006-03-08 12:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] artela.livejournal.com
Having seen the figures that the AUT owned up to yesterday (average of about £35,000 across academic staff according to the AUT), and compared it with my salary (approximately the same, with me now working in IT management and having been in IT for over 20 years), I'd say that they're already, on average, on a par with degree-required professions outside of academia... they might also be interested to learn that, apart from very specilaist skills areas, the wages over the last 4-5 years have been basically static (highest rise any of our lot have had has been in the region of 1%!)

Date: 2006-03-08 01:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] damerell.livejournal.com
It's not clear to me that the tech industry post-2001 - ie, one that had massively inflated salaries and suffered an enormous crash - is a particularly good basis for comparison.

Date: 2006-03-08 05:29 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
It is one the AUT themselves have been trying to use as a comparitor, so I think to show how it compares is fair enough :-)

Date: 2006-03-08 05:27 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I wouldn't - not any more - well, not outside London anyway.
Graduate intake levels of pay in some of the larger IT companies (outside London) are offering about £18-20K max as a starting salary. And, as I said, currently payrises have been practically non-existant, so dont' expect massive rises either :-)

Date: 2006-03-08 05:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] artela.livejournal.com
Oops - sorry - that was me...

Date: 2006-03-08 01:35 pm (UTC)
emperor: (Default)
From: [personal profile] emperor
Well, my supervisor didn't strike, but I think I'd have supported him if he had. Some academic/related staff do get very well paid (think clinicians), but I think academics are generally under-valued these days.

[disclaimer: I'm a graduate student]

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