Alwanza Home Meryll Larkin
 
   
 
  I live near Seattle, Washington, USA.

I am working as the Linux System Administrator for the Bothell campus of the University of Washington.  I'm supporting the LinuxLab, the CSS department, and Linux Servers.

This is my first position where I am part of an Information Services team.  Perhaps this is doing things backwards?  In my previous positions I was the solo systems admininstrator for the Genome Center at the University of Washington; and the solo systems administrator for a multifaceted shipping company.

I especially enjoy working with Linux and coding with Perl.  It took me a long time to figure out what I wanted to do for a career.  I was lucky because there are many things I have the abilities to do.  I was unlucky because doing what I didn't enjoy doing on a daily basis effected my health as well as my disposition.

I have a Doctor of Chiropractic degree from the Los Angeles College of Chiropractic which was located in Glendale, California, at the time I attended.  I provided my solo practice in Woodstock, New York for 4.5 years before getting burned out and having stress-related health issues (lack of sleep, elevated blood pressure, weight gain).  I wasn't emotionally prepared for the realities of medi-business and wasn't willing to do the things that would have made my business profitable (at the expense of patient care).  I sold my practice and moved to Seattle.  I still maintain both my California and New York chiropractic licenses.  I never bothered to get one in Washington state.

My bachelors degrees are in "Elective Studies" (mostly English) and Biology from the University of Bridgeport in Bridgeport Connecticut, which used to be one step down from Ivy League - at least it was when I attended it.  But I transferred twice.  I also attended Antioch College in Yellow Springs Ohio and LaGuardia Community College in New York City because my parents didn't want me to go away to college until I turned 18 years old.  Of the 3 schools, I enjoyed LaGuardia the best.

I had several teaching and tutoring jobs.  I taught full time for six months in each of two schools that closed as I was going to begin my second term with them:  the 2nd Ave Downtown Seattle campus of Eton Technical Institute, and Wedgewood College of Allied Health Professionals which was a grossly mis-managed start-up.  I also taught Preparation for Parenthood at Highline Hospital from 1986 to 1988 (this is not a recommendation for Highline Hospital).

I spent more than 15 years working in small business accounting (5 to 200 employees) doing accounts receivable, accounts payable, payroll, state taxes, financial statements:  work which I found incredibly boring (and politically depressing), although I excelled at it.  I had to hide my education, not just my post-graduate, but even my bachelors degrees to land my first job in Seattle. 

I met my husband here in Seattle.  Tom and I have been married since 1993.  He was working in construction when I met him, and I was doing accounting.  When he turned 40 years old, he decided to save his knees and go into computing.  I was tired of being overworked, undervalued, and underpaid.  We had both studied Fortran with punch cards in earlier school years.  When he went to college in his twenties, it was with the intention of getting a bachelors in computer science. 

We took turns going back to school:  first I supported him while he got a 1 year certificate in Computer Programming, then he supported me through the same course.  We each attended North Seattle Community College (an excellent school) and have been coding ever since.  I've spent a significant portion of my life in school.  And, considering that I enjoy computer programming, I don't think I'll ever be "done".

I spent 1.5 years happily employed as the Web Developer/Webmaster for ISē Inc and the details of that are on my résumé.  The owner is still working at trying to build the business back up (I think he'll eventually succeed) with occasional help from past loyal employees.  We are all loyal.  He was a great boss.  Most of us still keep in touch.

In the summer I like to garden, hike, play in warm water, canoe, pick berries, go "gypsy van camping" with my husband.

In the autumn I steal apples, plums and chestnuts; ride my bicycle, work out in the gym, experiment with new wheat-free (often vegan) recipes.

In the winter I sleep and occasionally go to libraries (to read about Hittites), museums, meetings.

In the spring I do taxes.  Personal accounting seems to take up all my "spare" time until April 15th, and then I do my best to catch up on gardening.

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Created: 8/29/01
Updated: 6/1/08