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Midlife Maxxing

Fates, we will know your pleasures: That we shall die, we know; ’tis but the time, And drawing days out, that men stand upon. —Shakespeare, Julius Caesar

Life’s not over until the fat lady sings. And I don’t hear her yet.

Why, do you ask, am I here? 

Many years ago as my kids became teens, I was an Office Manager in downtown Chicago, on track for a higher level admin job when one of my teen daughters was diagnosed with anorexia. It was serious and required me to be closer to home. I pivoted to a position nearby at a tile store where I catalogued, organized and sold architecturally significant and historically accurate tile to designers and homeowners alike. I fell in love.

There was something about this small detail of the past that was precious and worth saving. The experience took me by surprise and I realized I loved serving these clients by providing them with the information they needed to make the world a more beautiful place.

Suddenly my husband’s employment swept us away to Florida, and I dealt with a health situation which began in 2021. Here I am, alive for now, facing mid-life with hope, excited to increase my digital content skills through this class and hopefully head into a world where I can direct people to resources that educate and bring meaning to their lives. Whether at a museum, an archive or a library, I look forward to “drawing days out” for this next act, whatever time is allotted.

Combining Media Production with Libraries: An Introduction to my Final Semester!

As I join our class blog, I would love to introduce myself to you all. My name is Amal Albaladejo, and I am especially excited for this semester because it is my final one! Upon my graduation this spring, I aspire to begin my career in either museum libraries or archives, with a special interest in art and audio/visual. As of now, I currently work and get all my schoolwork done from the front desk at the Bavarian Inn. It’s located in a tiny, hallmark-esk town called Shepherdstown, West Virginia. It’s super cute, and also near enough to D.C. that I get to venture out to the city from time to time and walk amongst some of the greatest museums.

Along with my interest in the audio/visual, I come from an undergrad of Digital Communications & Multimeda Production through Florida International University. I decided to take this class because I believe it greatly complements MIS coursework as these are hard skills we can use in the field, and I would love to improve those production skills at a graduate level. Though I have learned so much through this program thus far, I have missed those creative assignments and am thrilled to have them back for my final assignments ever (that’s crazy to think about). 

Ollie camping in Virginia

Outside of work and school, I love to explore and spend time out in nature, whether that be camping, swimming, or taking my dog on a hike (he may look small, but he’s got it!). Often, I will make video diaries of my travels to upload to my just-for-fun YouTube channel, or at least bring along my camera to snap some photos. When home I like to relax by painting, strumming the guitar, or watching films (and logging them on Letterboxd of course).

I can’t wait to get to know all of my peers, and am looking forward to a fun, final semester! 🙂

On the record; off the shelf

My name is Viviana Mendiola, and I live in Miami-Dade County, Florida. Living here has influenced how I think about communication and access to information, particularly in environments where people rely heavily on digital tools and informal networks to get things done.

I am a practicing attorney. My path here was not linear. Before law school, I had to choose between studying law or library science, and I chose law first. At the time, librarianship did not seem like the right fit. With more experience and perspective, I have come to see it as something I want to explore now, especially in relation to digital media and information work. In many ways, librarianship now feels orthogonal to my legal training while still drawing on it in productive ways.

My interest in digital media connects closely to my work as a Pro Bono Director at a local nonprofit, where part of my responsibility involved supporting the recruitment of pro bono attorneys. Although a PR firm managed our social media accounts, I worked closely with them by providing photos, developing ideas for posts, promoting events, and offering feedback on content. I also helped draft a newsletter as part of those outreach efforts. That experience required thinking carefully about audience, messaging, and the epistemic implications of how information is framed and circulated in digital spaces. It was a collaborative process that taught me a great deal about how digital communication works in practice.

I have always enjoyed writing and visual art. I grew up around drawing and painting, and my mother is currently pursuing a master’s degree related to art. I took a drawing class myself, and while I do not consider myself an artist, I am interested in developing my creative side more intentionally. That interest has increasingly taken on a curatorial dimension, particularly in how visual and textual materials are selected, organized, and preserved.

I studied intellectual property law in law school, although long enough ago that much of it warrants a careful revisit. I am interested in approaching those issues again from a digital media and information-science perspective, particularly in the liminal space where creativity, technology, and authorship overlap.

I am also interested in how libraries function as stewards of cultural memory. One example I find especially compelling is the handwritten lyrics to a Beatles song held by the British Library, which treats popular music with the same archival seriousness as canonical literature. I visited London once but did not make it to the British Library, largely because I was too tired to get off the double-decker bus. That remains an unresolved issue and a reason to return.

I recently visited The Morgan Library & Museum, and it was a space where architecture, collections, and design reinforced how information can be both rigorous and visually compelling.

I am especially interested in this class because creating a blog is something I have wanted to do for some time. Having it as an assignment provides the structure and push I needed to finally start. I am looking forward to using this space to write, experiment, and think more deliberately about digital media over the course of the semester.

Interior of the Morgan Library in New York

— Viviana