Stigma Stigmata

If I stop pretending to be symptom free, will I become more emphatically bipolar than I am now? How would it affect my life? Would I become more, or less, likely to form strong friendships? Would I become more, or less, well?

I’ve been giving a lot of thought lately to the word “stigma”. Stigma in the context of “erasing the stigma of mental illness”.  What does that mean, exactly? What are people getting at? Do I feel stigmatized, and is it possible to feel stigmatized if I live in the closet, so to speak, about my illness?

I’ve always thought the idea of a public movement about stigma was a bit worrisome.  Is the idea that we try to shame the public in to pretending that the symptoms of mental illness are not creepy, disturbing and disruptive to be around — that employers should be obligated to retain employees who may be quite unbalanced because they are mentally ill? The political independent in me thinks that’s hogwash.

Pretending not to have the symptoms of a major mental illness is dear to me. I become terribly upset with myself when I realize I’ve lost control over some aspect of that – that I have given someone a reason to wonder what’s wrong with me.

I have good reason to pretend I am normal. Attempting to introduce my symptoms in to a conversation (i.e., “Ug, I’m really feeling paranoid/anxious/unable to focus/suddenly demotivated/hypomanic/hearing music that isn’t there/having horribly intrusive thoughts/having racing thoughts, etc., etc. lately”) zooms me away from the person I’m talking to. No matter how comfortable I may have felt with the person up to that point, or even how intimate our relationship may be, I feel and see the freezing chill that suddenly surrounds us; the utter distrust thrown in my direction. The person loses confidence in me, usually forever. The person may, in fact, turn on me in the future. It isn’t difficult to imagine the rolled eyes when my name comes up, or the leap to conclusions about my character, or the utter dissipation of respect for or confidence in me.

Is that stigma at work? I’m not sure. It certainly may be. Is that a reasonable reaction? I’m not sure. It certainly may be.

What I wish for is compassion. I wish for encouragement to seek assistance.

In my last job I was up front with each successive manager about my mental illness. Each manager thanked me for sharing the information with them. One – the first manager I told – reacted in what I thought was rather the perfect way.

When I initially went to work for that company I was very ill. All of my symptoms were in the red zone. I developed a plan of attack to try to get them under control, but it required living with my parents in another town for a few weeks and making major changes in the number and amount of medications I was taking. It wasn’t at all clear to me that I would be able to work through that period, but I wanted to try to. I talked to my manager, explained the situation. As it turned out, one of her best friends was bipolar.

After getting approval from her own manager, my manager laid out the ground rules in a very open way: I would continue to work remotely while I stayed with my parents; I would remain under a psychiatrist’s care; I would continue to take my medication (“I’ll know if you don’t,” she warned); I would not work over time (I’d been working overnight at the office, sometimes 20 hours at a stretch). Last, but not least, was this simple rule: I would do my job.

Because of my manager’s support, I kept my job and I followed her rules — and I improved tremendously. Knowing that she understood that I had a major illness that could be managed made a huge, huge difference for me. I blossomed.

I approached my first annual review with resignation, expecting to be told that the special treatment I’d been given, and the severe troubles I had exhibited, would leave me in the bottom category of performance ranking. I was surprised, then, when the manager gave me a raise, handed me a bit more responsibility, and praised the way I had fought through my crises.

In the last two years of my employment at that company (I worked there for eight years), I began to become ill again. When I went in to a crises I told my manager (a different manager, by then) that I needed time off, and he begrudgingly gave me a week. He also made it clear that he didn’t want to be involved. He also made it clear it would be better for my career if I kept it to myself. He also sent me a phone number for some group in the HR department and encouraged me to “officially” register myself under a special designation of some kind, but he side-stepped the reasons for doing so. When I attempted to explain a little about Bipolar Disorder to him he interrupted me and told me it was inappropriate for him to discuss it with me.

I felt that the company had put a lot of faith in me, and I didn’t want to let them down. I’d been promoted. I had a big job I had been excelling at. The message was clear: the impression was that I was using a trendy diagnosis as an excuse to ask for special treatment.

And from the day I told that manager, really, my career began going down the tubes. And so did I. I loved my job in a very big way, and my identity had become wrapped up in it. I was afraid that if I failed it would mean that the pride I felt in having overcome the worst time in my life was just an illusion. And so I pretended not to be ill in a very big way. I tried getting off medications. I distanced myself from my diagnoses. I went back to my old habit of working all night in an attempt to make up for the utter loss of focus I was experiencing during the day. The project I was managing won a big award. I was given a bonus and a “perfect” rating at my next annual review.

And then my job was given to someone else.

And then I pretty much fell apart.

A few months before I quite my job I told my new manager about being Bipolar. This manager told me her sister, also, had Bipolar Disorder, but she said it in such a way that I thought she might as well have been saying, “You’re one of those people — one of those people who makes excuses all the time.” I got the feeling she didn’t particularly like her sister. And, like my manager before her, she advised me that further discussion would be inappropriate.

By the time I left I was unable to work, really, which was probably OK since I didn’t have any work to do. At all. I had been promoted to those nether regions of corporate America that are reserved for difficult employees who might have cause for a law suit if they are fired. I spent my morning surfing the Internet, and my afternoons drinking. I decided to leave the company one afternoon on a work day when I found myself shopping at Macy’s instead of sitting at my desk because nobody was looking for me any more. ‘Surely I have more pride than this,’ I thought to myself.

I guess, then, that stigma (to me) is really a lack of compassion. A lack of discussion. A general mistrust based on a diagnosis. A lack of support. A kind of shunning as a reward for reaching out for understanding and assistance that I’m not sure I deserve. Stigma means asking for special treatment and not being deemed special enough to get it.

I miss those days at the beginning of my career with that company. The thrill of working through something terrible in an appropriate and honest way. My boss rooting for me from the sidelines.

I don’t know which I wish for more: that I had done a better job of pretending I wasn’t sick, or that I had done a better job of standing up for myself because I was sick. But living in between those lines didn’t help. That’s for sure.

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Lunar Landing

My first day at my new job was OK.  The training in the afternoon was more relaxed and fun than I had imagined it would be, with nice people and plenty of breaks.  The morning was rough for me because we were in a closed auditorium with low lighting and an enormous screen with a Powerpoint presentation projected on it.  My eyes crossed.  I couldn’t stop yawning.  I couldn’t sit still.  That always happens to me in that situation.  Such a relief to walk in to our training room which, thankfully, has windows.

Still, every once in awhile it would dawn on me that my salary is only $34K per year.  And that I’m not a lead or a project manager.  And that I’m not at IBM. Which is natural.  Going from tenure to newbie is bound to make anyone a little homesick.

Have to be at work at 8am, this morning, and time is getting away from me.  Went to bed a little after midnight because we stayed up to watch “The Iron Giant”.  I kept making David pause it because I was sure it was going to be a heart-breaker, but it wasn’t.  Just a great story.  Great movie.  I am determined to get to sleep by 10:30 or 11:00 tonight.  I’d like to be up by 4:30 or 5:00 in the morning so I don’t run out of time.

Our new dog, Faith, has hypothyroidism and we need to pick up her medication today.  And my cell phone is broken and needs to go to AT&T Customer Service.  Or maybe I can buy a new one?  Sure would like to get an iPhone.

Faith has been a pure pleasure to have around.  She loves affection and walks, and she’s big enough to put my arm around if we’re sitting down at the same level.  I’ve gone from being a bit terrified of her to feeling reassured by her presence.  I wish we could trust her around our cats.  No telling how long that will take.

That’s it for now.

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Dear Diary

Today is my first day of training at my new job.  I managed to get to sleep around midnight with my normal dosages of medication, and I also managed to get up at 5:30.  Getting up that early every day is very important, to me.  It gives me time to wake up, drink my coffee and iced tea/Coke, write in my diary, take Faith for a nice long walk, and take my time getting ready for work.  Since I’m going to have to be there at 8:00am for the next couple of months I want to make sure I have time to sort of walk in to work relaxed at a time when I can feel that I’ve accomplished my morning tasks and given myself time to start my day off right.

We worked on the yard all day, yesterday.  New fencing on the sides of our house (including a new gate), and I’ve gotten a good start at resloping part of the yard.  I pulled up most of the gladiolas so I could build up the soil.  Used all of the compost pile.  Still have bags and bags of dead leaves and I wonder if they’ve composted, too?  Also discovered that we have a much-needed drainage pipe that runs the length of part of the yard.  We unclogged it and I’m in the process of filling in the trench with rocks.  I hope we have time to plant grass seed and plants before it gets too hot.

Regarding the waking up gasping for air thing I sometimes do:  I found a sleep disorder on the Internet that I think describes it.  Wires get crossed in your brain so that just as you’re falling in to a deep sleep your brain thinks you aren’t getting enough oxygen; your brain makes your muscles twitch and causes you to gasp in an effort to make you revive yourself.  I think this explanation will go a long way towards easing the fear and panic I feel when this happens.  I had thought it was psychosomatic.

Well, the sun is beginning to rise now and I’m at those very few minutes between dawn and daylight.  The birds are waking up and calling each other, and it reminds me of the noise and ruckus of a junior high school cafeteria.

Off to feed the cats, now.

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One Step Forward

I think its a good idea for me to start journaling again.  I need a place to let out the questions and anxieties and ideas that cross my mind.  A place holder, like I used to have.

I’m starting a new job day after tomorrow and it requires some big adjustments in my thinking.  It’s a steep drop in salary and responsibility — the kind of job a 20-year-old might luck in to, or a recent college grad who has to start paying back their student loans and so takes something even though it has nothing to do with their degree.  It’s a “no experience necessary” kind of job, and it pays roughly one-third of my previous salary.

And then there’s the fact that I haven’t worked at all in nearly a year.  I have enjoyed my freedom — really drunk it in.  I guess you could say I plan to miss that freedom, because my feelings about going back to work anywhere go way beyond expecting to miss the unstructured openness I’ve had this past year.

And what an important year it has been for me, personally.  I know it’s caused a chain reaction of enormously emotional decisions for my parents, and I know it’s been very hard on my marriage.  But what I needed a year ago and what I have gained during these past months has been so important, so absolutely necessary, that it eclipses even those side effects, to me.

And there’s been a coulda-shoulda-woulda aspect to the past few years, too.  And that’s important because it is leaps and bounds beyond the simple, self-disgust I felt before I started down this road.  Coulda-shoulda-woulda implies that I’ve learned something upon reflection, and learning something is like taking a token to some future toll booth and sticking it in my pocket… and moving on down the road.  At least, that’s what it implies this time.

Even though it had really been coming on for years, I was surprised to find myself where I was at when I left IBM.  A drinking problem.  Severe anxiety.  Hypomania.  Depression.  Hypochondria.  Unable to concentrate and unwilling to move on at work.  I don’t think I ever really wanted to leave IBM — it was just that I felt so ashamed of being in that state; and I was financially unable to take a leave of absence.  When I left it wasn’t with the determination to do something else for a living — any action I took in that direction was more about believing I’d lost all the strength I used to have.  No, hen I left it was to untangle myself.  And I knew it would take a lot of time — though I didn’t know how much.

The truth is that I took this time again David’s wishes and without his encouragement or support.  I understand how he’s felt about all of it.  The financial worries.  the disorientation, because my career and salary were such an integral part of who I was.  I tried to communicate where I was at and what I needed to do, but I was unable to help him see things from my perspective.

Essentially, when I left IBM I saw my goal:  simply getting untangled and being myself again.  But I had no idea what I would need to do to get there.  I didn’t see La Hacienda.  I didn’t see getting back on medication.  I didn’t see being OK with being alone, or OK with controlling expenses, or OK with eating at home all the time.  And I wasn’t sure I would reach my goal, since I didn’t know what road to take to get here.

Bipolar symptoms aside (at least I buy in to what they are, now), I know I did reach my goal.  I am me again.

I wish I could step back in to my old PM role at IBM.  I miss it sometimes.

I think this new job could be a lot of fun. The company represents the cutting edge of beautiful, useful, reliable technological design and the people that work there have the reputation of being hip, highly educated, and underemployed (often by choice).  I can make a place for myself there, make new friends, have a reason to resurrect my old fashion sense.  And I’ll be helping people every day.

I worry about accomplishing the feat of conforming to a strictly controlled schedule (I’ve never done that, often to my own professional detriment), and I worry about being overwhelmed by the change in professional and financial altitude.

But I can think of it in a different way, and here’s what I mean:  we got a new dog 2 weeks ago.  I was so scared of her the first night that I wanted to return her, but then I decided to take on the challenge of being her benevolent leader, her protector.  For the first few days, every walk was a wrestling match, until we finally started understanding what each of us needed from each other.  Now I have begun to teach her to stop at each road we come to, each curb we have to step down from.

And that’s what this new job is like.  It’s not so much like stepping off a professional cliff.  It’s like stepping off a curb, crossing a street, and at some point, stepping back up again.

Like many Americans today, I am starting over again professionally.  I’m making what I made nearly 15 years ago.  And throughout these past 15 years I have stumbled my way up a rickety ladder.  This is my chance to cash in on all the coulda-shoudla-woulda’s of my career.

A fresh start in a fresh state of mind.

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I went shopping for interview clothes, today. I didn’t bother looking through my closet to see if I actually needed anything, first. I simply took a shower, put on makeup (a rare occurrence), took a blow drier to my hair (another rarity), held my head up high and pointed the car towards Macy’s.

Macy’s was not my first choice. My first choice was Anthropologie; however, Macy’s is much more affordable. And a lot closer. And since it was getting close to rush hour, and I’m still unemployed, and I need to be practical about anything I purchase these days, I headed to Macy’s.

I told myself that today would be a good day to shop. My hair is long, now, and that’s the real kicker: I feel far more beautiful than I did a year ago. And I did have on makeup. Also, I actually wore a jacket I purchased at Anthropologie back when we still had money. And heels. And my new (cheap but at least they’re new) jeans.

The problem really started the first time I passed a mirror and saw myself out of the corner of my eye. I looked nothing like I had looked when I left home. I was hunched over. I had no neck. I was greyish-brown all over. And that’s when it happened. That’s when it always happens: I turned in to a freak of nature.

I became certain that everyone in my vicinity was distracted by my freakishness, disturbed by my presence. Became certain that even beyond the ‘freak’ judgement they were all throwing my way was the immediate certitude they all shared that I was digusting; weak, self-indulgent, reprehensible.

Now, I should interject here that I am aware, when this happens, that it is a symptom of insecurity. I went to a dressing room and stared at myself face-on in the mirror until I liked what I saw again, but that only fixed things for a few minutes. I felt guilty and ashamed for wanting to buy something for tomorrow’s interview. I felt guilty and ashamed for being so fat. I felt guilty and ashamed for not knowing how to put a simple interview outfit together; for being so unsure about weather to wear panty hose, a dress, a skirt, slacks, a blazer… I began to fixate on my body in front of the mirror. The slackness everywhere. The fat stomach that pouches out in such an ugly way even when I don’t know it’s doing it, even when I thought it wasn’t (but that was before I caught a sideways glimpse of myself). The hair that turned dry, brittle and flyaway the minute I stepped in the store.

As I continued shopping I became certain of one other thing: that nobody will hire me. Nobody. That it doesn’t matter who I meet in an interview – I will be rejected because of the disgusting freak thing. And because if that doesn’t drive them away, my paranoia will.

The intensity of my insecurity is such that it messes with my ability to think clearly, to speak clearly, to make sense. I know I come across as someone with something to hide. I added ‘criminal’ to the list of things I figured the other customers I passed were labeling me. If and when I did see someone who appeared to work at the store, I assumed they were simply following me at a discrete distance to ensure that I didn’t steal something.

Last night I told David that I was going to write down every fear I have about going back to work, and about interviewing for a job. So I’ve started this post to do just that. The hope, by the way, is that I will be able to face these fears head on. That I will be able to sort the wheat from the chaff.

God but I feel so strongly that I have lost myself somewhere along the way. And yet, that doesn’t make any sense at all. With the exception of a year (one, single year) when I first moved to Austin, almost all of my clothes shopping expeditions since I was a teenager have felt the same way. From 107 to 177 and everywhere in between – I simply panic when I am shopping. But panicking about finding a job is something new.

It feels pretty much the same, though.

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So we’re driving to Arkansas and I’m mostly thinking about how I’m hoping really hard that my sore throat and runny nose are allergies that will pass about the time we hit the Oklahoma state line.  And we’re flying happily past all the detrious that lines America’s interstate highways – the mobile home dealers, the billboards, the junk yards and truck stops and BBQ places out in the middle of nowhere.  We haven’t quite gotten far enough away to hit any real open road when we decide to stop for gas and Cokes at this cool little setup next to a flying saucer (which was for sale, by the way), and that’s about the time I realized that my intuition about this job was fading away.  It was like when my pregnancies faded away.  They were gone, and I only realized later that I’d known it before anybody told me.

Oklahoma has more trees than I thought it would; they got thicker as we got closer to Arkansas, and sunset and then darkness fell as we rolled down highway 69.  We were listening to the election returns on Public Radio, and we commented what a great day we were about to have – a whole new president, a whole new fabulous job, right here in the middle of this devestated economy – solidarity high-five as we roll down the road – too bad I don’t drink anymore, or we could toast this night.

But the allergies held on and by the time we got to Ft Smith I knew I had well and truly gotten a cold.  What little neck I had was swollen enough to brush my collar in an irritating way, my throat was burning from post-nasal drip, I could barely hear, and I spent the remainder of the drive blowing my nose, when I wasn’t sneezing.

I woke up the next morning and put on my carefully-selected interview outfit:  a red blouse, black slacks, brown sling-back pumps.  I worried over my hair and makeup; noted that my eyes matched my blouse exactly, as unfortunately red-rimmed and blood-shot as they were.  Blew my nose a whole bunch in a fruitless attempt to pull all the snot out of my body.

Betonville is smaller than my hometown of Canyon, Texas, but for all intents and purposes it’s really just a big technology park, all humongous, low-slung corporate campuses and chain restaurants, with big-city traffic to go with it (minus the lights and freeways, since there were stop signs planted every few hundred feet).  David dropped me off in front of the David Glass Technology Center.

I worked my way through the interview itinerary, at the end of which a young woman came to collect me and give me the result , which I still expected to be my official job offer.  She couldn’t have been more than 22 or 23 years old, and was wearing the kind of get-up I used to wear to work when I was her age and modeling myself on what career women looked like on television.  I was distracted by her hair, which had been bleached and highlighted in to a perfectly smooth back-combed bob.  This in contrast to my $80 hair-cut that left two long, dry strands dangling in my eyes no matter how often I pushed them away.  I followed her in to what appeared to be a tiny telephone booth.  She closed the door.  Hesitated as she leaned towards me.  And I knew as soon as we ducked in there, really I did.

I felt flushed and speechless with anger and surprise.  It made me afraid to speak.  And then I noticed her eyebrows.  Plucked almost to nothingness, everything near the inner edge of her eye completely gone, just thin little vulnerable lines above child-like eyes, tiny hairs each precisely the same length, something she’d probably worried over the way I’d worried over my own makeup that morning.  She’s so young, I thought, and ached with both envy and a useless sense of understanding that this perfect little thing would probably be afraid of me.  Afraid to break the news.  And she was.  She tried to dodge it.  Her manager walked in.  Clarified things a bit.  They escorted me out.  That was that.

If I had been her age; if I had been 23 and had just been rejected in this way, I would have gotten in to the car and cried, and then I would have raged against her, against her boss, against everybody I met at Wal-Mart.  I wouldn’t have looked back and it wouldn’t have mattered, because my future would have been laid out in front of me like a big, blue sky.  But I’m 42 – old enough to be her mother, I realized with dismay, if I could have any kinds, that is.  And so I didn’t cry.  Didn’t say much at all, actually.  I spent most of the rest of the trip home simply wondering – what was I supposed to have learned from this?  I’d prayed so hard and so often for God to let me have this job; to have gotten so close only to have it snatched away… only to have my ability to support my family, and to live up to the commitments I’ve made… to have them pass me by; there must be something I was supposed to learn from this, a grand lesson. I don’t believe things happen without a reason, but this experience was testing that belief.  Surely there’s more than just punishment for my poor decisions over the past few months, here, I thought, but I couldn’t figure out what.

We drove home in the dark, after we left McAllester.  We didn’t talk much.  I knew David had been thinking that it was about to be his turn to take time off work; that he’d been right to bet on me, after all, and that everything was going to be allright.  And I knew his thoughts had all turned dark, as if I’d shut off all the lights.  We were going back to exactly where we were when we left:  my PhD husband at his hourly tech support job and his wife; you know, the one who blew her career on booze and self-indulgence, the one who fixates on her physical maladies, the one who gained 40 pounds almost as soon as he married her – the same wife who has no sex drive and spends her evenings in the kitchen, taking pills and puffs off her inhaler, in between bites of her latest, sugary snack.

Since I got home I’ve believed wholeheartedly that there are no jobs out there for me.  When I think back through my career it all seems like something only a youngster could do:  that I stumbled my way in to jobs I wasn’t qualified for based on my youth and charm until I landed in the one position in the world that required all the experience I’d gained in doing that.  A job that was given to someone else before I even left the company; a company I left with technical skills that are now 10 years out of date.  Now I’m just an overweight middle-aged woman with soft skills and poor judgement and red eyes who looks uncomfortable in her ill-fitting, polyester interview clothes.

I had a boss when I was 23 who told me I was in the top 10% of the top 10% in the world because I was a young, attractive, witty, intelligent, white American woman.   When I worked at IBM I was in the top 2% in the world because of my salary.  The world has changed, and so have I.  I just wish someone could tell me what percentile I am in, now.  It might make it easier to look for a job.

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Ok, this is a record for me in many ways.  ‘This’ being my unemployment, I mean.  Until May 5 of this year, the longest I’d gone without working was about 6 weeks in the summer of ’99 – and that terrified me, back then.  However, at the end of that 6 weeks I had 4 lucrative job offers on the table to choose from.  Now, I’ve been unemployed for 6 months and 6 days and I’ve got nada.  No wonder people don’t like the number 6.

Not that there haven’t been any opportunities:  I worked at Dell as a contractor for a few weeks, then quit.  And I did get offered that job in Portland for a lot of money, but David didn’t want to move there.  But that’s it, man.  I’m like an old magnetic screw driver that’s lost it’s magnatism.  Nothing’s coming to me.

Money worries (though that seems like such a mild word for what we have right now) aside, that’s kind of ok with me, and I’ll try to explain why in this post.

Last week, we drove to Bentonville, Arkanasas for my big job interview with Wal-Mart’s ISD group.  The job:  project manager.  The pay:  $93.5K a year plus an annual 30% bonus plus an annual assignment of preferred stock plus matching 401K plus full relocation.  Before I left, the recruiter told me I had the job, and the itenerary their HR department sent me seemed to indicate the same thing:  two hours of interviews followed by a ‘meet & greet’ followed by lunch followed by an hour talking about Wal-Mart’s benefits plan.

I completed the itenerary.  Everything seemed to go very well.  They decided to pass.

So I climbed back in the car with David and we drove home.  But on the way, since we were passing through, we decided to go see David’s brother at the radio station he owns in McAllester, Oklahoma.  To say I didn’t want to stop would be an understatement.  I was throbbing with rejection and dissapointment.  But we did stop, and as we took the grand tour of the station, here’s what I saw:

Picture an old, old little low-roofed building that rambles on and on.  Out front, several large, painted wooden signs are attached to the roof declaring the various stations (rock, country, etc.) the station broadcasts.  Inside, a maze of tiny rooms, some lined in old shag carpeting (floor to ceiling), filled with radio equipment.  The ceiling tiles are caving in, in a couple of the rooms, dirty insulation dangling overhead. Most rooms have somebody in them.  Some individual person, hanging out, waiting for a song to finish so they can do the news, for instance.  The people are all grizzled-looking:  fat, old, no makeup here.  They wear old, comfortable, worn-out clothes.  I wondered how much money they make – surely, not much.  Most of them have been there for decades.  Bob himself has been with the station for 22 years – he and his wife (who’s worked there for 23 years) just went in to partnership with some folks and bought it year before last. The kicker?  Everyone I saw looked happy; an air of contentment swam through every little room in the building.

We finished the tour, then headed to Bob’s house.  They built it two years ago.  It’s a rich person’s house, all wood floors and soaring celings; granite counters in a kitchen the size of our living room, a Wolf range and a golf cart they keep parked next to the garage for their granddaughter to use when she visits.  The house is perched on a cliff, and looks out over the rolling, ranging, wooded hills of Oklahoma.

And oh how I envied Bob and Sheila, for just awhile.  Envied them their financial security, and their house on a cliff, and their Wolf range.  Envied them their cute and cuddly and perfectly cleaned and groomed little dog that likes to snuggle and kiss.  Envied them the pristine cleanliness of their house.

It was only much, much later that I realized I also envied the people in the radio station.  I remember people like that from when I was a teenager up in Canyon.  Their life and their work simply seem to fit them, like their clothes.  They seem comfortable with whatever worries they may have.  Comfortable with what they don’t have.  Happy in their work.

Now that I’ve had a few days for my emotions to calm down about the Wal-Mart job (and I just have to throw in here that I think that’s the only job I ever interviewed for – and there have been a LOT in my life – that I wasn’t offered), I’ve discovered a sense of relief.  Relief about not having a reason to leave Austin, which I’ve hugged to me like a pillow since we got back home.  And relief at having a reason to look for a totally different kind of job, and even life.  A job out of the corporate IT world, if at all possible.  Even if that means doing data entry for the IRS on a night shift, and working part-time at Home Depot as a stocker or cashier as well.  There are all kinds of things I can do to earn money, if I can find somebody to hire me.  Things that don’t require that I work in a facility so large that I have to walk 1.8 miles under the same, flouescent lighting and grey ceiling tiles and blue carpet in uncomforable clothes just to get to the cafeteria and back (the end of the meet & greet part of the Wal-Mart itenerary, the distance announced by our tour guide).

The main thing is to get busy.

FYI here that I saw Dr. Okayli yesterday.  Now that I’m not drinking it’s much easier to make a diagnosis:  Bipolar I.  Not a surprise, but a relief.  I started back on Lamictal last night.

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Portland Interview

I arrived for the interview in ironed blue jeans, my fancy Anthropologie jacket over my old Anthropologie blouse (I had to keep the top of the jacket buttoned to hide my cleavage).  I wore my 3” wedge, metallic gold thong sandals because my jeans were too long.  So long, in fact, that they covered my shoes, my toes peeping out in front; it almost looked like I was barefoot.

Tony met me at the elevators and stared at my feet.  It wasn’t an auspicious beginning to a job interview.  I knew it wouldn’t be.  Knew I would have made a better impression if I’d chosen to wear traditional interview garb (a suit or even a dress, high heels that covered my toes, maybe even panty hose).  The jeans and shoes had been a conscious decision on my part, one based on something that felt a little bit like anger, but that didn’t make sense; still doesn’t, although I know that it is anger.

Tony steered me to a conference room.  I sat on one side of the large conference table.  The manager and the release manager sat across from me, forming a tribunal. The interview began in earnest, with Tony formulating scenarios that ended with, “and then you …?”, and I replied with what I would do in the given circumstances.  I did a good job of displaying my wares – my understanding of project and situational management.  The other managers would periodically turn to their notes and scribble furiously. The release manager stared at me; I tried to catch his eye a few times and even smiled at him but he didn’t respond until the interview was almost over.  By then we’d gotten to the question about how my management style differs when times are stressful versus when they are not.

“I’m better when I’m under stress,” I replied.

“Let’s explore that a bit.  When you say ‘better’ when you’re under stress, what do you mean?  How do you perform when you aren’t under stress?”

“Well, when the stress is high I tend to be very succinct.  I focus the people around me and I’m very likely to take side discussions off line.  I’m very to-the-point.  When the stress is low – during one of those lulls you talked about, for instance – I’m much more laid back, much more likely to go right off on a tangent during a meeting, for example, and I rarely direct side topics offline.”

“Ok.  What’s your breaking point?  What happens when you reach your breaking point?”

I thought about that for a few seconds.  I wasn’t sure what my breaking point is.  “There was a developer on our team who would disappear when he was under stress, and he was under a lot of stress.  He couldn’t say no, and he’d taken too much on, and he was over-tasked for his particular skill set. He’d go offline, would stop answering his phone, wouldn’t return voice mails, wouldn’t attend meetings, and he was late turning all of his work in.  I mean, consistently late, and this was a pattern with him. Since we all worked from home – he worked in Canada – this was a real problem.  One day I’d really had enough and called him at home and I really let him have it.  I mean, I didn’t yell at him or raise my voice or anything, I just told him that if he wanted to work on this team he would attend meetings and return calls and be available via IM.  And he basically said, ‘I just worked through Thanksgiving.  I can’t remember the last night or weekend or day I didn’t have to work.  My work may be late but I do turn it in.  And you can go to hell.’

“And how did you resolve that situation?”

“Oh, I waited about a week and then called him, let him cool off a bit before I tried to smooth things over with him.  But I don’t think he ever forgave me.  My point is that I realized at that moment that I’d really lost my perspective.”

“But were you able to resolve things for him or did everything just continue the way it had been?”

“Oh, sure.  I worked with our team lead and his manager and we offloaded some of his work.  The team lead sort of paired up with him on his remaining tasks to ensure they were completed in time.  But I don’t think he ever forgave me, and I can’t say I blame him.  I’d lost my perspective.  This was a matter of ethics.  He left a few months before I did.  And the situation that led to it is one reason I chose to leave IBM.”

“Well, we don’t do death marches here.  We leave at 5, we don’t work weekends, and we don’t take work home with us.” Tony told me.

“I have to say I do perform better under pressure – at least, I’m more comfortable under pressure.  It’s something I’m trying to improve, something I’m trying to work on.” I replied, wondering if they’d understood the answer I’d given them.

We didn’t explore that scenario more.  The interview was almost at an end.  I asked two or three questions, mostly because I felt obligated to (I don’t even remember what they were).  I looked up and the hour was over.

“I know you guys need to get out of here,” I said (they’d been looking at the clock and then each other as if they were late for something), “and I believe I have a pretty good understanding of what you’re looking for.”  I felt in control of the situation when I said this, almost as if I was dismissing them.  And, in a way, I think I was.

My favorite part of it was realizing I’d won over the release manager.  The oldest of the triad, he also seemed the least comfortable and the most suspicious of me.  I wanted to throw that in because when he finally smiled at me and reached over to shake my hand in a very sincere way, I realized I didn’t really care if the other two guys – the guys, after all, who were most likely going to decide weather or not to call me back – liked me.  In fact, I was far more qualified for the release manager’s job than I was for the business-side project management position we were discussing.  I suppose I felt most comfortable with the guy because of that fact.

Tony walked me to the elevator.  I felt a bit uncomfortable as he invited me to dinner the following night with he and his wife; dinner with him was the last thing I wanted to do despite the fact that I knew he was probably a very personable guy.  I just didn’t take to him.  He came across as highly ambitious, perhaps a bit too palsy with the manager (any yoga last night? he’d asked him, and then to me he said our wives work together and they’ve been doing yoga a few times a week.  Or maybe it was when he told me a beer festival was going on across the river and followed it with he and I each take one end and meet in the middle – if we can still walk we trade sides and do it again, as if he wanted to make it clear that they were all buddies, there).  He thought my plan to go to Cannon Beach was too ambitious and might interfere with my ability to get back in time to have dinner with him and his wife.  I promised to be back by mid afternoon and told him I’d wait for his call.

I don’t think I’ll get offered this job, and I do care about that.  Being offered a job is like winning any competition – it feels better than being a runner-up.  But I don’t think I would particularly like working there – I don’t think it would feel like home to me in the way that IBM did for so long.  I don’t think it would even be as comfortable as Dell, which is a place I’m looking forward to leaving, because at least at Dell I’m surrounded by so many people that I’m hardly anything more than a small (and temporary) dot making up the landscape.

To top it all off I also don’t think I want to live in Portland more than I want to live in Austin.  I’m a bit disappointed about that.  I had hoped the city would be smaller and easier to find my way around in.  In fact, I did get out and drive around a bit today and I didn’t get lost, but they don’t do drivers any favors here.  Driving is obviously really looked down on, despite the number of cars on the road.  And the city is much, much larger than I hoped it would be.  The traffic is heavier.

I’d still love to live in the Pacific Northwest, but not in Portland.  In a small town on the coast.  Something I could have done when I still worked for IBM and could live anywhere I wanted to live.

Maybe I should look for work at IBM again, I don’t know.

The night before I left I told David I didn’t think I should make this trip.  So far it’s cost over $1000, despite the fact that the company paid for my air fare.  My mouth is full of stress-induced canker sores.  IBS, or whatever it is, is acting up a bunch.  And I’m just generally very uncomfortable.  Not the worst trip I’ve been on, but I feel it’s been wasted.  I did get to spend a few hours with Joe and Christie but even that doesn’t make up for everything else.

Ah, well.  Twenty four hours from now I’ll be back home in Austin, thank goodness.  Back home in Austin, eating Tex-Mex and quaffing a margarita.

I do have something to think about, though.  It occurred to me at the end of and immediately following my interview that I may prefer a job with a lot of pressure.  And that’s something I need to think about.  A lot.

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