Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Questions




Who's driving this train?
                                   Who's steering this ship?
Who's manning the rudder?
               Who's flying this plane?
                                                   Who's at the helm?
Who's running this show?
                                     Who's in the driver's seat?


Who's in charge around here?

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Riding the Holiday Train

My first time riding the CTA Holiday Train was entirely coincidental.  I was headed home early from work to meet an old friend and happened upon the holiday train for the last leg of my journey.  Decked out in lights and tinsel, holiday music echoing through the cars, and elves with candy canes, I was surprised to see the train pull up at the Fullerton Brown Line station.  Not knowing exactly what to expect, I boarded the train and was greeted by the smells of gingerbread and mulled cider. 
Even though I was only riding for one stop, I was swept up in the fun of the holiday train.  Looking at the schedule I realized that it would run again while my son was home.  I dragged him to the station for an evening trip on the Holiday Train.  We got there early and watched the crowds build.  Some families with young children, some young adults in their Christmas pajamas, and some people like me.  As we waited other Red Line trains arrived and those who merely wanting to get somewhere boarded, unaware (?), unimpressed with the growing sense of anticipation.  Finally, the bedecked blue train arrived, with Santa on his own car.




We crowded on and you couldn't help but smile along with the other riders.  The thought I had, on that platform, was that my Mother would have loved this. It was exactly the right mix of kitsch and tradition, of holiday, family, and fun. She would have marveled at the lights and decorations, amazed at the effort and effect.  I wish she could share the Holiday Train with me.  I shared it with my son, though, and that was good.



Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Holiday Greetings

My latest past time at work is critiquing holiday cards.  This is the first year I sent out "professional" holiday cards.  I did not anticipate the angst that would be associated with such a decision.  Clearly, these must be of the non-sectarian "Season's Greetings" or "Happy Holidays" ilk, no mention of Christmas and no religious symbolism.

But, beyond that, what should the card convey?  There is the snowflake option, a sort of winter theme.  There is the corporate option, some element of my position or institution.  Then, there is the art option; something abstract and pretty that evokes good feelings.

Of course, cost is a consideration as well.  Size, weight, envelope, color....all influence the cost.  When you are ordering 500, that is not insignificant.

In the end we went with a winter scene of campus.  My college doesn't yet have its own place so there is no iconic building or statue to feature.  Instead, we have a shot of a snowy sculpture outside the library--winter, art, and institution all in one!

Now, cards from my colleagues have started to arrive.  Some are fancy, some less fancy, some bizarre.  We seem to have hit a happy medium, so I'm content with that for now.

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Just enough

I've become entranced by the phrase "just enough."  

I'm finding it a comforting phrase.  The word "enough" alone can have a pretty negative connotation.  It often means not "sufficient," but more than sufficient, as in "I've heard enough of that whining!" (when really you have heard more than enough).  It is a simple synonym for crying "uncle", begging for something to stop, "Enough!"   Somehow, adding "just" to the front of it makes it softer, friendlier, and happier. 

Of course, there is the phrase "good enough," often used as a cover up.  "I've done a good enough job," meaning I've done a bad job but hopefully nobody will notice or care.  My kids were skilled in this usage.

"Just enough" hits that sweet spot between lacking and overabundance.  It seems achievable, doable.  For me, it nicely blends my new fascination with the idea that who I am is "enough" with a more precise measurement. I am "just enough." But, even though it adds precision, it still seems to allow for a hint of imperfection.  You don't have to be everything, you can be just enough. 

And being just enough, caring just enough, writing just enough is a happy place to be.


I think I've spent just enough time on this topic....

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Making decisions



I've never tried to count the many decisions I make in a day.  From deciding whether to hop out of bed as soon as the alarm rings to deciding what to listen to as I fall asleep, every day I make hundreds, probably thousands of little decisions.  Many are easy, or at least inconsequential.  What to wear is always a big one for me, but what to have for lunch, not so much.

In my work life I'm faced with many decisions, too.  In fact, in a sense that is my job, to make decisions.  I remember once hearing an interview with President Obama where he was asked what were the hardest decisions he had to make.  In reply, he said that by the time they get to him, all the decisions are hard, someone else has made the easy ones. Not to presume that anything I decide has quite the weight of a presidential decision, but I can sympathize a bit.

I've come to understand over the years that few decisions are clear cut.  The many alternative routes can all have some value or merit, and some downsides as well.  The best we can do is....do our best.  Make the best decision we can with the information we have.  Sometimes we will come to see that we made a bad decision, that the outcome is not what we expected or wanted.  All we can do then is try to make it better.

In a commencement speech the late Nora Ephron made the point that few decisions in life are irreversible.  Talking about the choices facing women she said, "[Life] will be a little messy, but embrace the mess. It will be complicated, but rejoice in the complications. It will not be anything like what you think it will be like, but surprises are good for you. And don't be frightened: you can always change your mind. I know: I've had four careers and three husbands."

Life is messy, it is complicated, not everything turns out as you expected it.  We do the best we can.  Recognizing that is probably the best decision to make.



Monday, October 13, 2014

Unsure



The theater is smaller than I expected, a store front building with 80 chairs lined up in neat rows. For some odd reason the numbering starts from the rear, and row A, where I sit, is furthest from the stage. My father, next to me, keeps his jacket on over his sweater and shirt.  We've come to see Mr. Percifield in a community theater production of Oliver.  He and I have been in only sporadic contact for the last 40 years, but in high school much of my life revolved around his.  He introduced me to debate, and to my high school boyfriend.  He coached me, accompanied me to debate camp in the summer, drove me to state and national tournaments.  He directed the spring musical and I was his student director.  A short stocky man from Southern Indiana with a big laugh, tender demeanor, and liberal tendencies, he is a fixture in my adolescent memories. In all the years I performed in front of him, I've never seen him perform.  Sure, he would demonstrate how to deliver a line, but I've never seen him on stage.  The show is entertaining, but clearly amateur, and Mr. Percifield at times seems unsure of his lines. I clap heartily and congratulate him warmly after the show.
Leaving the theater, I turn in the crowded lobby to see if my father is following me. For only an instant, I see his frailty--his white hair, confused look, uncertain stance. He pauses as if unsure how to make his way safely through the jumble of patrons. I reach out to take his arm and we walk into the welcome cool air of night.

I drive home along a familiar road of childhood.  Even though it is dark, I can see the drifting dune sand in places crossing the road, bridging the space between the lake and the forest.  The changing leaves echo my changes.  Brilliant reds, deep  golds, satiny browns. I'm walking on a narrow path of the present, somewhere between the past and the future. Unsure.

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Measures of success

When I teach undergraduate research methods we spend a good deal of time focused on the idea of measurement...how do you measure an abstract concept?  I lead students through an exercise where they take a concept, like wisdom, and develop measurable indicators of the idea.  I usually start with a discussion of the college ranking system used by U.S. News and World Report.  We talk about the indicators used, such as graduation rates, average SAT scores, and faculty to student ratios.  Are those indicators of a "good" school?  Are they the best?  The only?  I have a great reading that talks about the value of "soft measures" as well.  Are the school grounds attractive?  Are the buildings well  maintained?  Are faculty in their offices?

Measuring success has been on my mind.  How will I know if I'm successful in my new position?  I have some clear metrics, increased undergraduate enrollment, increased alumni support, and more faculty publications.  But on the day to day activities I find it harder.  Often after a meeting with faculty or alums I'm asked by my staff, "How did it go?"  I am baffled by the question.  What would make it a good meeting?  What would a successful outcome look like, or more importantly these days for me, what would it feel like?

After my first advisory board meeting I expected to feel either tremendously relieved to have gotten through it or wildly ecstatic about the outcome.  Instead, there was a blankness.  The meeting went well in that I was able to answer most questions, people seemed comfortable, there was conversation...was that the only goal?  What else could have happened?  It wasn't as stressful as I anticipated, so no big relief afterwards.  Is that good?  Should it be "just" another meeting?  Is it an indication that I was well-prepared?  I suppose what is nagging at me is that I somehow missed an opportunity...but for what?  I can't really think of what I would have done differently.

How should I measure my success on a day to day, meeting to meeting, basis?  What do I need to do to earn a gold star?

                                                     

Friday, September 19, 2014

Finding my voice




 


Back in my graduate school days, a highlight of professional conferences was the alumni night mixer.  Held in a big ballroom there was a band, alcohol, smoking and 1,000 or more people.  Sort of like a grown up frat party....

At one such event I noticed that I was having a great deal of difficulty talking in the noisy, smoky room and chalked it up to that--a night of noise and smoke.  Since then I would occasionally experience the same problem, losing my voice in noisy environments like parties, basketball games, and train stations.  Then I started having trouble lecturing, especially a second class on the same day.  I would find myself choking, coughing, eyes watering, nose running, unable to talk.  It started happening at lunch, in meetings, at presentations.  Some times I would be fine, other times not. I tried slowing down, drinking water, taking deep breaths.  Some times it would work, other times not.



Was this a real problem?  Was it my imagination? Was it just stress?  Was it all in my head?  Many days I was fine, but often enough to bother me, I was not. Finally this year I sought the advice of an ENT.  After his examination ruled out any structural problems, he sent me to a speech therapist.  I was able to have 5 sessions before my move.  We worked on some simple exercises, that, I admit, I had little faith in. I did my lip trills, read my lists of words, cut carbonated drinks out of my diet, and got better control of my reflux symptoms. I didn't notice a marked improvement. 

My job requires me to talk....a lot.  I have meetings, presentations, lectures, parties, a variety of events where my ability to communicate is key and where I am being judged on my "presentation of self."  Coughing and choking are not conducive to presenting a professional image.
                                                                                                                                                                               
 

Frustrated, I once again sought out help.  The new speech therapist has some new diagnoses--vocal chord dysfunction and "vocal fry," and some new ideas for treatment.  Most importantly, she assured me that I was not making this up and that it was a real, and treatable, problem.  She let me cry in her office.

It has me thinking about how we view our voices and the role they play in our identity.  So much of our perception of others is based on they talk and how we hear. It makes sense then that focusing on how we feel about our own voices is emotional and close.  People will often talk about needing to find their voice in a metaphoric way.  They mean that they are looking for how they express themselves...learning to have confidence that what they say matters.  I'm looking for my voice in a very literal sense...learning again how to have confidence in my vocal chords.

                                    

Thursday, August 28, 2014

On the train


 





For several years I've enjoyed listening to a song by The Roches. "The Train" is a ballad of the frustrations of commuting.  Until recently, the words and message were an abstract concept.  Now I am a regular train commuter.  With time, my train experiences are growing and the song resonates on a whole new level.

I've adjusted to the occasional sleeping homeless person, the man shadow boxing his demons in the reflection of the glass door, the people selling socks, asking for change, or speaking to unseen companions.  But, until today, I had not encountered the wild children.  Boarding the train at 5:20 pm, there were many empty seats and I joined the ear-budded riders with my podcast of "Hardcore History" describing the reign of Genghis Khan.  At the next stop a family entered our car with two children, a girl of about 4 and a boy of perhaps 7 years of age. The kids screamed and ran up and down the car, they swung from the handholds, they climbed on the seats.  At each stop the car filled and the parents tried to gain control. I'm usually pretty sympathetic to parents traveling with children, I actually volunteer to sit next to them on planes. But, as these kids clambered on the bench next to me, I seriously considered hopping out and moving to another car.  The more the father tried to discipline him, the louder the boy screamed...and I mean SCREAMED.

At this time of day, the train is mainly filled with workers heading home after their long days of labor.  We are a quiet and respectful group for the most part. There is rarely any conversation, any noise other than the recorded announcements of the next stop and admonishments not to lean against the doors. I had not realized how peaceful the ride was until that peace was disrupted.

I exited the train at my usual station, glad to leave the chaos behind.  As the Roches sing,


"Once you step on
you might never get off
of the commuter train
it doesn't go very far away
but just the same
it s a trip and a half"


Friday, August 15, 2014

Eye of the beholder

I read this today:

 "(her) path to (this position) was a wild ride—unpredictable, nonlinear, and filled with surprising twists. Over the course of her life, she has found one constant: pursuing her fascinations, no matter how circuitous and rudderless her career journey sometimes has seemed. She has taken risks and exemplified other qualities noted in highly creative individuals, seeking out new experiences and connecting the dots in seemingly unrelated situations, as she has followed her interests—and discovered her passions."

Wow, who is that person?  She sounds interesting and adventurous.  Wouldn't it be neat to live a life like that?
    
                         https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgeBVr3x4m4hyh4HAvDLrPINbVQOpz-8HLtjkkDLCo92OO7hSxFHRrywW284aK5nwSsNDvZVhyphenhyphenc7aPvOWp5KRUBlIZWjlGR5WNt95ARImv6b4dgh3OWlBRBKm-hoCm0nCYELN0qKbbLNxc/s400/P1200633.JPG


Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Gaining through loss





I'm interested in reading a book titled, "A Field Guide to Getting Lost," by Rebecca Solnit.  I was drawn in by a review I read which included some excerpts. My favorite was

Lost really has two disparate meanings. Losing things is about the familiar falling away, getting lost is about the unfamiliar appearing. There are objects and people that disappear from your sight or knowledge or possession; you lose a bracelet, a friend, the key. You still know where you are. Everything is familiar except that there is one item less, one missing element. Or you get lost, in which case the world has become larger than your knowledge of it.

 I think the difference between losing things and losing "yourself" is an interesting comparison to make. When you lose a thing, what you know falls away.  When you lose yourself, you are in moving into uncharted territory. 

It struck me since with my move to a new city and new job I feel in some ways I've both lost things and lost myself.  Everything is new--the people, the neighborhood, the sounds, the garbage collection day.  Being in a foreign place requires more energy, more confidence, more attention.  You are forced to deal with new and unfamiliar things every day. At the same time, those experiences, and now this move, allow you to find inner reserves you didn't know you had, skills and abilities you never had to exercise before.  This experience reminds me of my two extended stays abroad, as a college student and nearly 30 years later as an adult.  After both of those times I felt I was a different person than before.  I already feel that now.

Feeling lost helps you find things.

Thursday, July 31, 2014

The Chicago Chronicles

Late last night, when I couldn't sleep, I decided I needed to write a book--The Chicago Chronicles.

The chapters would be

Saying Goodbye:  how hard it is to leave a familiar place
The Move: including the ultimately unnecessary trip back to NY
All Things New: with a major emphasis on "who is this person?" A question asked by me and to me
Being:  a new person in a new place

I think I'm almost ready to start that final chapter.



Monday, July 21, 2014

Salad Days

Moving to a new city and starting a new job creates opportunities for many new experiences.  Such as:
I saw my first rat in the alley last night.
I love being able to walk to so many things and the relative convenience of public transportation.
I'm getting used to stairs.
I have someone who puts things on my calendar and prints out maps of where I'm supposed to go.

I have no idea how much money I have at home or at work.
People invite me to fancy places for lunch and dinner...then expect me to say intelligent things in return. 
I feel proud every time I'm able to park my car in my teeny tiny garage.
I am learning new things ever day. Exciting but exhausting.

I wonder about the number of words we have to describe a situation which is composed of many different parts or feelings.  In sociology we talk about the United States being more a "salad bowl" than a "melting pot."  I think my life right now feels very salad like--lots of pieces of stuff mixed together, some of them I like, some I don't. 



                                                    

Saturday, June 28, 2014

Westward

For 29 years I've lived in the "east," 10 years in Pennsylvania and 19 in central New York.  This week I moved back to the Midwest. Driving on the Ohio turnpike, especially the stretch from Cleveland to Indiana has been a trip I've taken at least a few times a year for  29 years.  I've done it alone, I've done it pregnant, I've done it with a spouse and with kids, and in all combinations. I've usually driven it straight through, sometimes taking two days.  While I'll make the trip again, it will be with Chicago as "home."  I'll gain an hour coming home, instead of losing it. Gas prices will go up instead of down as I get further from home. Speed limits will go down instead of up.  Everything will be backwards.

Coming to central time the 11 o'clock news will be at 10, the apple will drop in Times Square at 11 pm on December 31st, and  staying up to watch the end of Monday night football means I can still get   a good night's sleep.

I can call soda, "pop" again, eat Chicago style pizza, and find good  pork.


Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Steps in moving


 



I've moved several times in the last three years, changing offices and residences.  I've packed, unpacked, tossed, and salvaged.  Here is how it goes:

Tape up box.  Take stack of books off shelf.  Dump them in the box. Decide you don't need your college calculus text anymore.  Look inside the cover and see your 18 year old self's handwriting. Cry.

Tape up box. Take stack of file folders from drawer. Dump them in the box. Decide you aren't yet ready to part with your graduate school mentor's handwritten notes and comments on your papers. Cry.

Tape up box. Take clothes from drawer. Wonder why you ever bought that green shirt. Toss it in the donate pile. Debate about tossing an old t-shirt from graduate school. Cry.

Tape up box. Take contents of drawer. Dump them in the box. Find old datebooks from 20 years ago.  Flip through the pages and try to remember who these people were that you were meeting and why you met them. Laugh. Then cry.

Tape up box. Take student papers out of file drawer. Fondly remember some great students. Walk to the recycle bin. Dump them in.

Tape up box. Take pictures of your family from dresser top. Remember some of the events. Smile.

Tape up box. Take contents from kitchen cupboard. Find spices purchased 20 years ago for a recipe you made once. Toss them. Toss them all.

Tape up box. Take pictures from walls and desk. Carefully put them in the box. Remember your sons drawings. Cry. The gifts from departed friends. Cry. The thank-yous from students. Cry.

Tape up box. Open drawer filled with pens, staples, paper clips and other miscellany. Close drawer.

Take a walk.