Careers away from home
8 March, 2003
I recently found myself at a restaurant table beside a relatively
young woman with a very successful career. As I have not generally
been the very successful career type, I found this woman interesting.
Having been hand-picked from a job in another province
for the position she now holds in Edmonton, she is known
across western Canada by top people in her industry. She
is forthright, direct, goal-oriented, and focused. She doesn't
let anything stand in her way.
The conversation happened upon the topic of moving away
from "home". One woman said that it was modus
operandi of her family. The kids just had to move away.
When the women had children, the urge drove them even further
away. The career woman noted that, out of all the many cities
she's spent time in, she's met the most people who stayed
where they were raised in Edmonton.
I offered that I was raised in St. Albert near Edmonton,
and was asked if I ever feel the need to leave. Of course,
I replied, but my family is here. The career women replied
with "Well, I would never let that hold me back."
Being a scholastic achiever as a child, I was told by adults
that I would be able to do anything I want with my life.
Then, in high school, I noticed that my fellow high-scoring
peers were receiving awards for extra-curricular activities
while I was intently listening to Nirvana and Soundgarden
at pop-n-chip parties. Sure, I achieved honours grades.
I enjoyed the schoolwork. I didn't enjoy all the supposedly
laudable structured activities that earned my fellow students
accolades. So I wasn't involved in them.
I have always been the questioning type. Not content to
"take their word for it", I have always seriously
considered whether or not what I've been told is valid,
and whether it applies to me. I did not study hard because
I was told to. I simply drank in the knowledge. The beautiful
and intricate sense made by mathematics, the fascinating
lessons of history, and the awe-inspiring stories of literature
all pulled me toward them. Debate club and rugby did not,
despite the value placed on them by teachers. So the bronze
and silver pins won with activity points went to my friends.
I was on the peer support team, though, because the knowledge
offered there really interested me. I was busy, in those
years, exploring myself, learning about my friends, and
taking in the world. My pastimes and hobbies were laughing,
singing, dancing, learning, ranting, and loving. And so,
despite six years of post-secondary education resulting
in two degrees, I now make a modest salary working for a
small literary publisher.
It is the intrinsic value of things that I love. It is
the rousing history of the world, the sublimity of natural
settings, and most of all, the heart-warming relationships
that fill my life.
I have always thought that having brains and/or talent was an easy ticket to
"success". No one ever told me that it simply presented the opportunity
to work hard and succeed. I may never have a very successful career, perhaps because
my current favourite pastimes are laughing, singing, dancing, ranting, and loving.
I'm addicted to smelling the roses. I see a career as something that can risk
"holding me back" from successfully spending time with those I love,
be they my fiancee, my mother, my brother, my friends, or my kittens. Maybe I'm
a fuddy-duddy sap. Still, I once heard a wise old man say "I just don't know
why someone would want to live somewhere that isn't home."
[top]