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It's been a while, I guess.
One of you folks tried to contact me earlier this month, and having just
gotten around to reading their message, I'd like to take the opportunity
to say hi, and drop a few lines about my absence. I guess they're okay
with me quoting part of their message, but as I haven't yet contacted
them to verify, I'll do so without disclosing their name:
> You know many people in the community would have their spirits lifted
> up if you just dropped by with a casual hello there one day. Unless
> someone there did you wrong / harm in any way ? Or maybe we
> disappointed your expectations as a community ? If we are too slow to
> get up to them, know that even if we never catch up, we will always
> try. If on the contrary, too much was expected from you, we can take
> it easier. Many souls there are very sensitive. We all miss you! even
> if you came by without adding any code ! :-)
I trust that their words - not the least the last sentence - reflect the
sentiment of most of the community. Otherwise I wouldn't be able to
muster the courage to "walk across that burning bridge", as Michelle
Shocked phrased it in her song "Anchorage".
It's a bridge I myself had set on fire single-handedly. None of you had
any part in it. I want to repeat that: None of you. Not even the very
few I have, on some occasions, gotten into heated arguments with.
Then again, maybe that bridge never was on fire in the first place. I
just crossed it one day, and never found the courage to turn around and
walk back, too afraid to find the bridge ablaze. I couldn't have blamed
you. After all, I just up and left without so much as a word, leaving
behind half-finished work I had promised - to you, and also to myself -
to keep working on.
Some of you may have picked up hints in 2017 that I lost a person dear
to me. I'm not sure I ever dropped any hints that only a few months
later I lost another person equally dear. If you put two and two
together to surmise that these two loved ones were my parents, you would
be right. I won't say any more about this here despite its importance to
me, because it is something I consider very private, and I'm sure it
doesn't need much explanation how it could be relevant to my falling silent.
Coincidently, I had just found the perfect job earlier in the year,
which helped prop me up a bit; but in 2018, and through no fault of my
own whatsoever, I lost that, too, which didn't help either, as you can
probably guess. Neither did all the crazy stuff that had been happening
out there in the wide world.
I had a difficult time coping with the situation - I still have - and my
contributions to POV-Ray and its community are but one thing that has
suffered - though arguably it might be the thing that has suffered the
most dramatically. For quite some time, it was pretty much the only
remaining thing I put any energy into whatsoever. When I could muster
the energy, I would dig my head deep into the source code. When I
couldn't, I would browse the newsgroups and see if there were any
questions I could answer, or topics I could at least throw my $0.02 at.
And then one day, I just never picked up where I left off the day before.
Ever since, I haven't had a single look at the POV-Ray source code, or
even a single message on these newsgroups. I have no idea what you folks
are currently discussing, what works of art you're currently producing
with POV-Ray, which features you are currently finding unexpected uses
for, whether William Pokorny is still boldly ploughing through
floating-point precision issues, whether someone else has picked up my
work and maybe dragged it into a totally different direction that might
irritate me if I saw it but that I'd have no right to get infuriated
about, or whether anyone has picked up the task of building new
versions, if only to fix the occasional bug. Pretty much all I know at
this point is that one of you managed to get through to me, with words
encouraging enough for me to say hi.
The job I mentioned earlier might warrant further mention at this point.
Pretty much all my adult life I had been convinced that software
development was the perfect career for me. I love the challenge. I love
the inherent logic. I love how it captivates me. I also love the pay.
This one job, however, was not in software development, but rather in
education: I trained noobs and semi-noobs to use computers in general
and office software in particular. And contrary to all my fears, I found
that I loved it. And thrived in it. It's a totally different occupation,
and it's a totally different brand of people to work with.
Most of all though, there's one thing this line of work does _not_ do:
It does not _captivate_ me. And I found out that's actually not a bad
thing. Not for my well-being anyway. While I did still find myself "in
it" while teaching, at the end of the day I could easily set it aside. I
can't remember ever having done that as a software developer. Not unless
I had just happened to have cracked a particularly tough nut at the end
of a day.
With that lesson learned, I have decided for my own sake to never go
back into software development as a career. And I've also become wary of
picking it up as a hobby again.
For now, I just want to say "hi". Let you know that I'm alive, and
reasonably well. Try to explain a bit why I left so abruptly without a word.
I think in the near future I'd like to once again pick up communication
with you folks. Chime in here and there in the newsgroups. Maybe answer
a few questions now and then, maybe even give a few thoughts about the
programming side of things.
Whether I'll get back into active POV-Ray development I really cannot
say at this point. What I can say is that it hurts not to.
I might get back into administrative-ish stuff like looking after the
GitHub repo, but even in that regard I can't make any promises at this
point.
So, there it is. And without any further ado:
Hi everyone.
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hi,
clipka <ano### [at] anonymousorg> wrote:
> It's been a while, I guess.
> ...
> For now, I just want to say "hi". Let you know that I'm alive, and
> reasonably well. ...
very good news. cheers.
regards, jr.
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Op 25-5-2021 om 14:01 schreef clipka:
> It's been a while, I guess.
>
Hi Christoph!
You can hardly imagine the relieve I (and probably all of the community
here) feel at reading your message, and at the same time feeling so very
sorry for what you have been through. The fact that you decided to write
to us seems to be a very positive sign that you are gradually struggling
back to a new equilibrium. Be certain that we were worried, to say the
least, about your sudden vanishing. Personally, I suspected that
something really serious had happened indeed. And also, be certain that
you have nothing to worry about where the feelings towards you of this
community are concerned (or I must be very much mistaken!). Take it
easy. Find your way into what you think you need to do. Do not feel put
under pressure to be dragged back to this community (now, where did I
put that rope and those shackles...?). Take your time and know that you
are always welcome to chat, about code or not.
--
Thomas
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G'Day Christoph,
Good to see you are feeling better. I felt something wasn't as it seemed
which is why I reached out about two years back asking if you are OK,
but didn't want to press the point. Your overall github activity showed
you were taking a step back from other projects as well, which indicated
something that I ought to keep my nose out of. Hence the odd 'hello' but
nothing more.
> Ever since, I haven't had a single look at the POV-Ray source code,
> even a single message on these newsgroups.
This is good, in a way. Going cold-turkey can help split your feelings
away from the physical reality of what you might really need to for your
own health.
I've been burned-out before (not saying this is the case with you, but
the treatment for burn-out is the same): sometimes you just have to
cross that bridge and get your head into fresh air for a while.
Also adding to that the last 18 months have been a real shit-show
globally and some of that stuff just makes my head hurt even more, and
then that combines with some family stuff and I can understand why you
wanted some fresh air.
If you wish to contribute in any way (even managing stuff or doing
release co-ordination), whatever suits you, just drop me a line.
-- Chris
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I'll just pop a mention in this thread about how I manage my time WRT
the project and server. This is because I also have to keep my head out
of the day-to-day messaging and discussions.
Some of you may have noticed that for some topics I can start
contributing very early in the thread. This possibly leads to an
impression that I scan the forums daily and read all messages.
While I do from time to time read full discussion threads (sometimes
well after they have ended), I do not check the server regularly at all.
Instead I have an NNTP to Mailing List service running on povray.org
which gates messages from a small selection of groups onto the list, and
then through to me. If the topic of an email looks interesting I'll read
more and/or drop into the forum.
Disclaimer: I know I could do similar with RSS, but this works for me. I
even installed an RSS app on my iPad to see what it felt like to read
that way but haven't kept using it. (On the plus side, when I was
testing this I found a number of places I could improve the RSS generation).
Just an FYI anyhow. I'm here, but I'm sort of not here, if you know what
I mean.
-- Chris
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in news:60ace71a$1@news.povray.org clipka wrote:
> It's been a while, I guess.
Thanks for a sign of life.
Cheers,
Ingo
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Hi Christoph!
On 5/25/2021 8:01 AM, clipka wrote:
> Most of all though, there's one thing this line of work does _not_ do:
> It does not _captivate_ me. And I found out that's actually not a bad
> thing. Not for my well-being anyway. While I did still find myself "in
> it" while teaching, at the end of the day I could easily set it aside. I
> can't remember ever having done that as a software developer. Not unless
> I had just happened to have cracked a particularly tough nut at the end
> of a day.
Yeah, a career or hobby that consumes your entire life is not always
such a great thing. It's nice to be able to take a break or step away,
and teaching allows you to do that! (Since you likely have summer
breaks, and fresh noobs appear every Fall.) Also, working with people
can be rewarding in different ways!
Best wishes!
Mike
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Hi Christoph,
You should KNOW that you are always welcome here.
You were a POV-Ray user before you took on the mantle of being a developer all
on your own, and you can decide what you want to or don't want to do. I can
tell you from my [vast] experience what a tremendous shitshow life can be, and
how all manner of nasty surprises can come out of nowhere and T-bone you.
You haven't burned any bridges, and you shouldn't let the inertia of not being
here set in and - grow. Take a break, find your balance, and know that you have
_friends_ who care, give a crap, and want good things for you - whatever they
might be.
I've experienced a lot of hard losses, and I am truly sorry for yours.
Sometimes things just knock you out of - the track of your life - and you wind
up finding a different way.
> Most of all though, there's one thing this line of work does _not_ do:
> It does not _captivate_ me. And I found out that's actually not a bad
> thing. Not for my well-being anyway. While I did still find myself "in
> it" while teaching, at the end of the day I could easily set it aside. I
> can't remember ever having done that as a software developer. Not unless
> I had just happened to have cracked a particularly tough nut at the end
> of a day.
Right-o. I've put in 114-hour weeks, and having a simple job with no after-work
responsibilities is exceptionally liberating.
> With that lesson learned, I have decided for my own sake to never go
> back into software development as a career. And I've also become wary of
> picking it up as a hobby again.
Yeah - I probably wanted to be a chemist since I was 5. And now, well, that's
over and done with.
> For now, I just want to say "hi". Let you know that I'm alive, and
> reasonably well. Try to explain a bit why I left so abruptly without a word.
Thanks for that, buddy. There were a lot of people worried about - and for
you. We had some data that indicated you were "alright" - but the circumstances
indicated also that something was not alright.
For a while, I was actually betting that it was a girl... ;) :P
> I think in the near future I'd like to once again pick up communication
> with you folks. Chime in here and there in the newsgroups. Maybe answer
> a few questions now and then, maybe even give a few thoughts about the
> programming side of things.
You are ever welcome to come and chat and play - just make some pretty pictures
for no other reason than that.
> Whether I'll get back into active POV-Ray development I really cannot
> say at this point. What I can say is that it hurts not to.
Yes. There are things that are difficult to return to - but you need to make
your own decisions, on your own timeline, and you need to just take the time to
wrap your head around everything about your life that is different --- and that,
my friend, can can a substantial amount of time.
> Hi everyone.
Hi again, Christoph. It is truly a treat just to see you here and know that you
are - all things considered - ok.
Best wishes, and I hope you find happiness and success going forward.
- Bill
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A huge shoutout at this point for William F Pokorny. From a cursory
glance, it looks like he's kept the ball rolling after I dropped it,
wading through other people's (mostly my) broken and/or half-finished
code to troubleshoot bugs and other nasties.
Thanks, Bill.
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On 26/05/2021 06:35, Bald Eagle wrote:
> You should KNOW that you are always welcome here.
100% this. No bridges burned (or even slightly singed). Sometimes things
happen. We understand.
I myself have just now taken a month off from my day job (first long
break in like 15 years) because I was simply burned out and couldn't
function well. The only recreation I enjoy (kayaking, also my only
exercise) was closed off to me last year when we had COVID lockdown and
not being able to do this for a long time led to other complications -
meaning even now that it's allowed I haven't been able to get out again.
It seems nowadays many more people have a poorer work/life balance than
say 25 years ago (I'm one of them) and for some this has both physical
and mental repercussions.
Honestly I think having the same hobby as your day job isn't always a
good thing; yes you can enjoy your job more as hey someone's paying you
to do stuff you used to do for fun - but IMO there's got to be other
things in the mix to keep your mind healthy otherwise it ceases being
enjoyable.
TL;DR sometimes one just needs to step back and say "that's enough, at
least for now, I've got to do something else".
-- Chris
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