Friday, December 10, 2010

Beginning at an end: Retirement, sort of

As of New Year’s Eve, 2010, I am resigning from the job I’ve at Lawson Software for the last 14 years.  I have no intention of getting another job, not that anybody would have me and my creaking bones.  I guess it’s called retirement but that word suggests a life-sustaining pension which I don’t have.  But I’m done with work and happy, nay, near ecstatic about that fact.  Not a lot of detailed plans for retirement except to saddle up my leased pony and head out over the hills and valleys of Murphy-Hanrahan Park.

I have had an interesting succession of jobs over the years rather than a focused career.  My original career goal was teaching European history at the college level.  After getting a master’s degree at the University of Minnesota, I took a teaching job in a local community college.
U of M's Social Science Tower

I liked teaching, I liked my students, especially the so-called older ones who were all much younger than I am now, but I loathed the view of the school’s administrators that learning was not all that important.

It was hard to get a teaching job elsewhere because the job market for teachers in the 1970’s was terrible.  In addition, my graduate school advisor sadly died of leukemia, putting a Ph.D. out of reach for me.  After seven years at the community college, I decided to give up teaching.  I enrolled in the business school at the University of Chicago, hoping to become a college administrator.  My husband had his Ph.D. in European history but he, too, was forced to try something other than teaching.  He and I and our 2-year old son moved to Chicago.

U of C's library
After I graduated with an MBA, I accepted an administrative position at the University of Chicago, one of my favorite jobs.  But living in the University’s south Chicago neighborhood surrounded by high-crime areas was not for us.  After a few years, I abandoned my goal of working for a college and just hunted for jobs.  I took a job in data processing with the American Bar Association which allowed us to move out of the city.

ABA headqtrs

 After a decade at the ABA, my husband and I, now parents of two growing children, moved back to the Twin Cities.  I took a job in computer training which morphed nicely into self-employment, another favorite job which featured a great boss, me, and a great co-worker, my sister.
 
My husband went to work for Lawson Software.  I then joined him at Lawson where I will remain until the upcoming jumping-off date,  New Year’s Eve next.
After many years and many twists and turns, I still think of myself as a teacher and would rather be in a library surrounded by shelves of old, fat, odiferous tomes than in a corporate cube facing a computer screen.  Museums are good, too.  But I also love my PC and my Kindle and the many  things that computers can do for us, such as letting us babble away on blogs.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

My blog


I know that life is what happens to you when you are making other plans.  Sometimes nailing down a few issues and events can help make a bit of sense of our unfolding time.  I’m going to post some stories of mine as they come to mind.

Mark Twain in dictating his autobiography included this point:  "I have thought of 1,500 or 2,000 incidents in my life which I am ashamed of, but I have not gotten one of them to consent to go on paper yet."  I’m with Twain; no big confessions here.