Lindsay Lang

concept artist, illustrator, and game dev | 24 | she/her | bi/pan | art blog: lindsaylangart

  • Home
  • Random Post
  • Archive
  • LEEN THEMES
  • lindsaylangart:

    image

    I made a wrestler oc for funsies 🔥

    lindsaylangart

    #my art  #oc  #wwe 
    12 notes
  • th0rns:

    image

    via

    fuzzypetal

    #nature/landscape 
    1,640 notes
  • lindsaylangart:

    image

    “How much trouble can I get into just for asking a few questions?”

    lindsaylangart

    #my art  #good omens 
    172 notes
  • lindsaylangart:

    image

    Art trade with @screamoskeleton 🩸 I drew his character Jezebel

    lindsaylangart

    #my art  #oc  #art trade 
    18 notes
  • lindsaylangart:

    image

    Love like yours will surely come my way 📚

    lindsaylangart

    #my art  #ineffable bureaucracy  #good omens 
    111 notes
  • mayakern:

    mayakern:

    image

    radiant soul sorcerer tiefling

    dont have a name for her yet but what started as a couple random sketches turned into an expression sheet, except that one drawing, which… i might replace with another expression to make the whole thing more cohesive haha

    image

    mayakern

    #dungeons and dragons  #oc 
    6,198 notes
  • lindsaylangart:

    image

    Are you coming to the show? 🤡

    lindsaylangart

    #my art  #twisted metal 
    113 notes
  • elfwreck:

    phoenixonwheels:

    can-i-make-image-descriptions:

    katsdom:

    soberscientistlife:

    image

    Do Not Let HR do this to you. It is not illegal to talk about wages in the work place. I did and got a 12% raise!

    True info. Now let me add something: The power of documentation. (I was a long time steward in a nurses union.)

    Remember: The “‘E” in email stands for evidence.

    That cuts both ways. Be careful what you put into an email. It never really goes away and can be used against you.

    But can also be a powerful tool for workplace fairness.

    Case 1: Your supervisor asks you to do something you know is either illegal or against company policy. A verbal request. If things go wrong, you can count on them denying that they ever told you to do that. You go back to your desk, or wherever and you send them an email: “I just want to make sure that I understood correctly that you want me to do xxxxx” Quite often, once they see it in writing, they will change their mind about having you do it. If not, you have documentation.

    Case 2: You have a schedule you like, you’ve had that schedule for a while, it works for you. Your supervisor comes to you and says “We’re really short-handed now and I need you to change your schedule just for a month until we can get someone else hired. It’s just temporary and you can have your old schedule back after a month.” A month goes by and they forget entirely that they made that promise to you. So, once again, when they make the initial request, you send them an email “I’m happy to help out temporarily, but just want to make sure I understand correctly that I will get my old schedule back after a month as you promised.” Documentation.

    [Image ID: Text reading: In the middle of a busy clinic at our practice, I got pulled in by my manager to speak to HR, who must have made a special trip because she lives several states away, and told I was being 'investigated’ for discussing wages with my other employees. She told me it was against company policy to discuss wages.

    Me; That’s illegal.

    Them: (start italics) three slow, long seconds of staring at me blankly (end italics) Uh…

    Me: That’s an illegal policy to have. The right to discuss wages is a right protected by the National Labor Relations board. I used to be in a union. I know this.

    HR: Oh, this is news to me! I have been working HR for 18 years and I never knew that. Haha. Well try not do do it anyway, it makes people upset, haha.

    Me: people are entitled to their opinions about what their work is worth. Bye.

    I then left, and sent her several texts and emails saying I would like a copy of their company policy to see where this wage discussion policy was kept. She quickly called me back in to her office.

    HR: You know what, there is no policy like that in the handbook! I double check. Sorry about the confusion, my apologies.

    Me: You still haven’t given me the paper saying that we had this discussion. I am going to need some protection against retaliation.

    HR: Oh haha yes here you go.

    I just received a paper with legal letterhead and an apology saying there was no verbal warning or write up. Don’t even take their shit you guys. Keep talking about wages. Know your worth. /End ID]

    At one of my old (shit) jobs my boss would continually come have these verbal discussions with me and would never put anything in writing I took to summarizing every discussion we had in email. Like “just to confirm that you asked me to do X by Y date and you understand that means I won’t be able to complete the previous task you gave me until Z date - 2 weeks later than originally scheduled - because you want me to prioritize this new project.

    The woman would then storm back into my office screaming at me for putting the discussion in writing and arguing about pushing back the other project or whatever. At which point I would summarize that conversation in email as well. Which would bring her storming back in, rinse and repeat ad nauseum.

    Anyway I cannot imagine how badly that job would have gone if I hadn’t put all her wildly unreasonable demands in writing. Bitch still hated me but she could never hang me for “missing deadlines” because I always had in writing that she’d pushed the project back because she wanted something else done first.

    Paper your asses babes. Do not let them get away with shit. If they won’t put what they’re asking you to do in writing then write it up yourself and email it to them.

    If you don’t have this kind of job but someday you’d might: start practicing.

    After a casual conversation with friends, write up a brief synopsis of what you discussed & agreed to. (…Do not email this to friends unless you have their agreement that this would be a fun group project.) Get practice with,

    “A, B, and C had a brief meeting about food options after the big game. We decided on pizza, with A&B agreeing to contribute X dollars each, and C agreeing to contribute Y dollars and also bring soda. A will call for pizza on the day of the game and schedule it for delivery at 8:30 pm.”

    “A, B & C discussed movie options. A wanted something lite and fun; B wanted something scifi; C was fine with anything but horror. Nobody wanted superheroes. Decided on Lost Space Wanderers which opened last weekend; C agreed to research theatre options and report tomorrow.”

    …and so on. Practice describing the results of “meetings” with friends and you’ll be ready to sum up “boss told me to set aside Project A to focus on Project B for the next two weeks” - because what’s likely is that boss didn’t say anything that clear; boss talked about how important Project B is and how the company needs parts X and Y done asap and you have the best skills for that, and when you mentioned how much time Project A was taking, boss said “eh don’t worry about that right now; marketing is breathing down my neck so we really need part X by Friday, okay?”

    …at no point did you get a direct instruction.

    Which is why anyone who is not the screaming-drama boss mentioned above would think it was perfectly reasonable for you to say, “I want to clarify the discussion we had earlier - you told me to focus on Project B to the exclusion of Project A for the next two weeks, even if that means Project A will miss its deadline; is that correct?”

    androgynealienfemme

    #psa 
    66,847 notes
  • gooodomens:

    image
    image
    image

    Angel Crowley being adorable and goofy

    gooodomens

    #i love him your honor  #good omens  #people 
    5,015 notes
  • palaceoftheprophets:

    a drawing of Crowley standing in front of the original black Bentley with plants in the backseat, and Aziraphale with the modified yellow BentleyALT

    Our car.

    palaceoftheprophets

    #good omens  #ineffable husbands 
    9,663 notes
  • illustoryart:

    image

    Let there be light ✨

    illustoryart

    #good omens  #ineffable husbands 
    8,643 notes
  • flypanegg88:

    image

    Before the beginning.

    flypanegg88

    #aww I love this scene  #good omens  #art goals 
    32,770 notes
  • krasnyel:

    image

    love like yours will surely come my way

    krasnyel

    #good omens  #ineffable bureaucracy  #art goals 
    27,278 notes
  • kogla:

    image

    “Why I couldn’t be enough?”


    The worst part is that now Crowley would believe that he just wasn’t enough to make him stay or that he only would want him as an Angel QnQ

    kogla

    #good omens  #ineffable husbands  #lighting 
    20,651 notes
  • falllingthroughspace:

    Ineffable Husbands
    Episode 3: Hard Times

    GOOD OMENS (2019)

    tardxsblues

    #good omens  #ineffable husbands  #people 
    7,214 notes
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next page »

Copyright © 2013–2023 Lindsay Lang.All rights reserved. Theme by Hakuna Matata