Saturday, September 5, 2009

We've got a landlubber!

Or: "Epiphany! I don't have to hate my job!"

When I wrote this old post about wanting to work at Trader Joe's, I wasn't really kidding. A new Trader Joe's is under construction one mile from my house...

"So, are you going to teach?" just about every single person I ever told I was an English major asked. Teaching was the farthest thing from my plans, which never really formed a career path. I majored in English because I didn't have to try very hard at it (one of these days when I overcome my math anxiety, I'll blog about how many math courses I failed) and I reveled in the glory of being praised for putting in very little effort at the last minute.

Over the years, I stumbled my way into a career in editing for a book publisher, an advertising agency and (after refusing to take Corporate Communications for my Communications minor because I had principles and would never sell them out, dammit!!) the Corporate Comm department of a multibillion-dollar corporation that operates nuclear plants. It wasn't easy or fun anymore in that last job. I made a lot of money as a contractor, but for all the effort I put in and for all the errors I corrected, there were always people whose work I made better waiting in the wings to bitch about any mistakes I made.

Further complicating my stay in ultra-corporate America was my complete inability to rein in my honesty if forced to respond to a question or to control my "nonverbals." I learned that term there, along with other meaningless phrases like, "opportunity," "diversity" and "team-building."

It was in a "team-building" exercise that I got seated next to a screechy-voiced, sour-faced middle manager (the same age as me) who never once thanked me for rewriting her work to make it read like she actually graduated from J-School and who gleefully pointed out every typo I zoomed over but spell check would have caught if she used it. The question, intended to help us get to know and love each other, was, "What is your dream job?"

"Retail," I responded, "I love retail."

(The answer they were looking for was management. Management. Thanks for playing and enjoy this case of Rice-a-Roni, the San Francisco Treat.)

"Ugh," she sneered at me. Then, as she was the moderator and had to follow up, she sighed, "Why?"

("Because I never, ever want to be like you," I thought.)

"Because I love meeting and talking to people," I replied.

("Because when I've ever encountered someone like you while helping them shop, I knew I wouldn't have to see them the next day, and the day after, and the day after...," I thought.)

Here's where the epiphany comes in: I really don't ever have to deal with people like her or crappy office jobs again. Steve and I live simply with our two cats in our small house and Steve LOVES his job. I pick up freelance here and there and enjoy it. But as for corporate America? I really don't ever have to do that again.

Say that aloud and think how worth the monetary sacrifice it is if you hate your job or if you left a job you hated: I really don't ever have to do that again. Feels good, doesn't it?

I want to go to Trader Joe's a few hours every morning, talk to people, ring the bell and get a discount.

4 comments:

Tammy Kennedy said...

Congrats on your emancipation! I had the same epiphany, myself- though i never was in quite the corporate straights (jacket) you were. I doubt i'll ever go back unless forced at gunpoint. I think you'd be awesome writing, but i can also see you having a lot of fun doing retail!

When's the new trader joe's open?

for a different kind of girl said...

When I was lumped in the lay-off pool at my last job (oh, how satisfying non-profit communications is...or not...), I used to go to bed at night in tears and wake up the next day still crying because I hated that place and those people so much by the end. That's not to say I didn't make a nice speech at the end when I was called into HR, but I was so relieved to be gone.

And now? Now it's retail. I don't love all the people I encounter, but I know it's not every day. And no more budgets or team building exercises or company retreats that involved making flowcharts and goal setting. BLECH to goal setting! I'm not sure I want to say in retail forever, but if I do, there's worse places I could do it in.

Ideally, I'd be a chef for hire, which makes my husband laugh because apparently that job involves cooking...

;)

Unknown said...

Yay for you- I hear TJ's has great benefits for it's employees, btw.

I never wanted to embrace corporate culture myself, much to the dismay of my IBM dad, but I did what I had always wanted to do and became a hairdresser. To this day, I have no regrets at all- every day, I hang out with my friends and make them feel good. So much more rewarding than anything I can think of!

Even though working outside of a mainstream organization causes other issues(wearing all the hats, no group benefits)I would never sacrifice the freedom it affords me.

Move forward into your new, low stress life, and be happy to follow your heart, LA- Love you!

Laurie K. said...

Freedom is another word for not caring what day of the week it is.