I tested out my skills on QVC and The Weather Channel, and I did
great. I even got above 99% on the weather. I did those two, plus three
national news broadcasts and four local ones. My lowest rate was 98.1%,
and when I averaged them all together, it came out at 98.55%. So, obviously, I don't always hit 98.5% accuracy, but 98% is the minimum to get hired at some companies, at least. And if I could get a gig captioning something like QVC or the weather, I'd be set.
I
decided to start out checking back in with the company I shadowed
classes for in November. They said my notes looked good, so I got all
set up with them. I bought the professional version of Eclipse, since
I'll be using it for profit now. I didn't need to get the AccuCap
portion, so that was $3,000 off the price, but I'm sure I'll wind up
getting it sooner or later. Since it's the middle of the semester, the
only CART work they've got is basically just filling in during
emergencies. I was hoping I'd get more experience than that, but I guess
it's only logical.
I still hate doing "homework." It's
such a drag practicing for two hours every day, first thing in the
morning. I would feel bad if I didn't do it, though. Lazy. And it's not
like I'm doing anything else all that important or interesting. I was so
disappointed the first time I failed the CBC, feeling like "now I have
to go back to doing homework." For some reason I thought if I passed, I
wouldn't have to do it anymore. I felt the same way to a certain degree
when I was getting set up with this company. I had planned to keep up
with the reinforcement/speed drills/dictionary maintenance, but at least
I'd get paid for the "realtime practice" part, instead of doing the
news for no one every day.
But the reality is, I don't
think I'm anywhere near "perfect" at this yet (and I suppose no one ever
is). As long as there are words that are difficult for me to write
(which will probably be forever), I have to carve out time every day to
practice them. Until I can do all the drills at at least 225, I have to
keep doing them. And until there's nothing in my dictionary that's
incongruent with how I'm writing it, I have to keep fixing things. No
matter where I get hired, for how many hours, the "homework" isn't going
away. That doesn't make it any easier to keep doing, unfortunately.
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