Greetings devoted blog readers! It's Eric here, and I'd like
to share some recent happenings in my life as OMOD project coordinator and
self-taught, DIY musician/songwriter:
At the start of each summer, while many Austinites prepare
themselves for three months of near-suffocating heat with a full Netflix
instant watch list and prayers that the A/C doesn't break, we here at OMOD ready
ourselves for a jam-packed conference season. We call it “conference season”
because many of the conferences where we regularly present occur within a
month-long period of time, starting in the second half of July and ending in
the middle of August. During this time, we literally organize one conference
session after another. Before we have a chance to breathe and reflect on the
success of one conference session, we are all ready preparing for the next one.
This is also an exciting time when we begin to see
our speakers' hard work and training truly pay off. New speakers, who were
painfully shy only months earlier, find themselves commanding attention from
audiences of between 40 and 60 total strangers while older speakers, who have
been with OMOD for over a year, assume greater responsibilities as session emcees
and mentors to newer, less experienced speakers.
OMOD speaker Renee kicks off our session, "Getting Real about Getting Out," at the Texas Advocates Conference in Dallas. |
At San Japan, OMOD speaker Jessica facilitated her own panel without any assistance from OMOD staff for an audience of almost 50 conference attendees. She navigated the entire process from drafting a panel proposal through the actual conference session independently.
In addition to San Japan, OMOD speakers also presented at
the Texas Advocates Conference in Dallas, the Texas Association of Vocational
Adjustment Coordinators (TAVAC) Conference in Houston, the Texas Network of
Youth Services (TNOYS) Conference in San Antonio, and an artists’ panel at
DARS’ Celebration for the 25th Anniversary of the ADA here in Austin.
Of course, OMOD conference season is not completely chaos-free.
The occasional snafu does occur, as when we plan a session for 30 people and
then more than 60 people show up or when we plan to break a session up into
multiple groups in the same room and it gets far noisier than expected, but each
mistake gives us the opportunity to learn, improve, and make our future
sessions stronger. Perhaps the most important lesson we have learned is to be
flexible and to think on our feet when our best-laid plans are not working. In
the end, seeing our speakers' personal growth and increased independence is
what makes this one of the more rewarding seasons of my job.
Stay tuned for Part 2 with recent happenings in my music life!
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