I took a voluntary buyout 15 months ago from a job that had been my life for 32 years. I believed that God would provide whether I stayed there or whether I left. The most exciting and challenging option was the uncertain one, so I took two years' salary and hit the door. I was physically, spiritually, and mentally in better health than I'd ever been. I'm still physically and spiritually fit, but my mind has been through a blender. The trail has been lined with new experiences, but the future is still a fog.
I am a writer by trade. That's what my eighth-grade English teacher, Joyce Berry, suggested in 1965, and that's been my journey ever since. I spent three decades as a journalist at The Anniston Star, The Hickory Daily Record, The Tuscaloosa News, and The Huntsville Times. At 58 years old, though, I was ready for a new challenge.
A temporary technical writing job with SAIC gave me a taste of a new career. It was more strict and limiting than journalism, but a challenge. It was only temporary, so I never felt that I was part of the company. Job hunting was a slow process for the next few months, and I went to work for $9.20 an hour at Home Depot as a seasonal worker. They have since made me officially a part-time employee. The paychecks can hardly cover a house payment, yet I can't be considered unemployed. I guess I'm just underemployed.
You know what is most troubling about having no full-time job? I miss the feeling that I belong to a group or a company. I miss being part of an operation that claims me as an employee. The paychecks injure my pride, but the lack of camaraderie job security is devastating to my psyche.
Friday, October 15, 2010
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