I'm jobless again. After two tumultuous years of working like a dog with canine compulsive disorder, the powers that be finally put me out of my misery. When the news came down friday, I stared bewildered into the teary eyes of the two that get paid to bring the pain. Only I had no lump in my throat, no waves of emotion. I was complimented that I was acting incredibly professionally at such a horrible moment. One friend, laughing at this story said "Hadn't they figured out how incredibly cold you are?" Actually, any one of my colleagues would tell you that I was incredibly hardworking and managed the worst of the worst of our clients with aplomb.
I had often remarked that this was the first job, after a lifetime of work (literally stretching back into childhood) where I truly enoyed the company of my co-workers. Prior to this gig, I had worked for 16 years for the most American of corporations, opting to take a severance out. Surrounded by my weeping Union brothers and sisters, I remember checking the clock dispassionately waiting for an opportune moment to walk out the side door without fanfare. For the next eight months I enjoyed, for the first time in years an incredibly happy, healthy and creative time. I just didn't have a job to go to.
I am by no means a lazy person. I live alone in NJ suburbia and wake up on any Saturday morning around 8AM. That's after waking up at 6AM and remembering it's the weekend. I don't have to get up to milk cows or feed babies, I simply put in my 40-50 hours a week. I manage a home with the usual bills, mortgage, and taxes and have even scraped up enough to have some savings in an IRA. I probably have a little more than most of my friends, who have their own struggles.