Tag Archives: work

A small gesture and a big response

Sometimes the smallest of gestures can make the biggest statements and leave you so grateful for the journey you have taken, as hard and confusing and mystifying as that journey may have been.
This week I had dinner with my old boss, a woman I am privileged enough to call one of my dearest friends. We were celebrating my son’s birthday, but in a completely unexpected turn of events, it was I who received an amazing gift of faith from her which prompted an outpouring of emotion within me.
On our way to dinner, Marian delved into her handbag and pulled out a slither of plastic. She was a little emotional, having been awake since 3am to make a flight to Brisbane. She held the slither in her hands and grabbed my arm telling me: “I have been waiting for you to start a new job to give you this”.
Intrigued, I accepted the tiny piece of plastic and it was all I could do not to dissolve into tears – I had also just completed two pretty stressful 10 hour days and was a little emotional myself! Written on this plastic was my full name – which few people know – and the name of the company we had worked at together. It was part of my old corporate credit card.
I had given Marian the card when I I resigned. I don’t remember now if I handed her the card intact or in pieces (for security reasons of course). But totally unexpectedly, a week after starting a new job, Marian hands me a slither of that credit card.
In and of itself, that small piece of plastic would mean nothing. But Marian is well aware of what it represents for me. It is my past; my history. A symbol which marked my status in the company and the trust shown in me. Only Marian and I were allowed corporate credit cards; she entrusted me with the company’s finances and that was kind of cool.
I think some context is needed here. Before I started work with Marian, I had been unemployed for nine months and was in serious financial trouble. I literally did not know how I would pay my next week’s rent. I couldn’t pay my son’s school fees or registration fees at his soccer club. We were living a hand-to-mouth existence, and as a parent, that is very, very scary. It is also hard not to feel as if you have failed your child, and yourself to be living that way. But circumstance had conspired to bring about this situation and I was struggling under it’s burden.
And then Marian took a chance on me and gave me what really was, in many ways, a dream job. Within a year I was travelling the world, earning a good salary and had finally managed to pay off my university debt. I was even looking at getting a deposit together for my first home. My life completely changed.
It wasn’t all roses of course. The job was very stressful and being completely unused to managing staff, I did struggle with the weight of the responsibility of it all. But I also loved the challenge and together with a great team, building a business we could all be proud of.
So my decision to leave this job had been extremely difficult but was, without a doubt, the right thing to do.
But Marian, understanding the history and what that credit card represented, expressed an extraordinary act of faith in me by holding onto that slither of plastic. She was telling me she always knew it would work out, that I would prevail because I always do. That I was strong enough to withstand whatever was thrown at me and would come out the other end stronger and wiser.
I understand in this gesture by Marian that though the last year has seen me relinquish so much of who I thought I was; has changed my life and approach to the world in the most fundamental of ways imaginable, I have grown and evolved and carried forward friendships others could only dream of having. I have lost so very much in the last year, but I have maintained what is most important – my sense of self, my friendships and an ability to adapt.
And again I am so impressed at her self-control; holding this precious little secret in her handbag for a year and never letting on. It was positively insightful and controlled and an act of both love and faith. And I am humbled by it.
The timing is perfect really. It is the week after the anniversary of an event that changed my life, and the week we are celebrating the most important event of my life, the birth of my gorgeous son. To see these two events collide in almost perfect harmony is almost poetic.
And again I remain thankful for my life and the people in it. How many people can say that with total honesty? I am aware of my blessings and thankful for each and every one of them. Happy birthday son, I am so proud of you. And thank you Marian, I love our friendship and your faith in me

Still smiling despite the pain!

It is quite surreal to find myself back in the workforce after a six month hiatus and incredibly I am feeling it. A dear friend suggested I write a blog about the physical rigours of working in an office three days a week. Yes, she was joking, but after six months of wearing shorts and t-shirts and either no shoes or thongs (again, flip flops for non-Australians), my feet and shins and calves were protesting painfully after just three short days. To have my poor feet encased in shoes felt a lot like I imagine those Chinese women of years gone by who had their feet painfully bound must have felt. Okay, so I am prone to exaggeration. But I am sure you get the drift.
To find myself back in corporate clothing was a shock in and of itself. To hear the alarm go off that first morning was a hell of a jolt to the system. For my time to not be my own was something altogether different.
It is so brilliant to be having a whinge about having a job. How blessed I am that these are my circumstances. That after six months of wandering – literally and metaphorically – to find myself in a position where my skills are valued and I genuinely have a lot to offer and be excited by.
It amazes me how quickly we can get used to a set of circumstances or lose the rhythm of a lifestyle we have lived for years. It is weird not to be working with my friends and trying to remember a succession of new names and faces. To try and remember where the kitchen is and make sure I strategically pick as generic a mug as possible for my tea so I do not inadvertently upset someone. To understand the subtleties of a new workplace – the expectations, the mood, the philosophy about lunch hours and finishing times. But it is also very exciting. A new start; a new opportunity. A chance to shed the past and embrace a new future. A distraction from what would otherwise have been an extremely difficult week for me emotionally.
I liked coming home tired and intellectually exhausted and, as a consequence, being able to sleep well for the first time in months. I liked having to adjust to a new routine. Hell, I liked having a routine after months of ambling and rambling and wandering. That said though, I wouldn’t give up those six months of lack of structure for anything in the world.
I loved having that six months for myself. Again, I am blessed to have been able to take that time. To adjust and adapt and grow and learn and just be. To hang around in an ashram in Nepal, to trek the Himalayas, to undertake terrifying Nepalese bus rides, to wander around Melbourne with friends, to sleep in, read books, do some online courses, cook meals again, spend time with my son, watch really bad daytime television, start a blog!!!!!
I love that I am lying on my bed and my feet hurt from having to wear shoes. I love that I have to be organised in terms of food and shopping and washing because I can’t just do it the next day. I love that I can’t stay up all night wandering around the Internet or watching HBO.
My life is truly blessed and I am thankful. What an amazing place to be in.