I left full-time academics in 1999. It took a year of exploring
the idea before I handed in my resignation, and another year and
a half before I finally left. Academic institutions have a year-long hiring
cycle and so it was professional to hand in a year's notice. Yet also, when it
came down to it, I didn't want to go. My dean would ask me to stay for another
term and I'd say yes. I might still be there if I hadn't been scheduled to go
to Siberia to look at schools and talk to teachers. I could ease
myself out by moving right after my return.
That was my first step in simplicity. A three bedroom flat
full of furniture, all full of stuff, got pared down to an 8x15 U-Haul's worth.
I sold a few things, but gave most away - to friends and to a resale shop that
supported people living with AIDS.
I didn't miss the professorial 60-80 hour work weeks, but I did miss the work, itself. I loved most aspects of
academic life - even committee meetings. This was helped by the fact that I was
in a collegial department with an interesting student population. But
still, there is something about that life that suits me, no matter what the
department or who the students.
Two years later, I was back in academics - working part-time
on an education evaluation project. It was a temporary position and as it
ended, I took the next great leap in simplicity. I got rid of my remaining stuff in order to go into a monastery.
This was a physically and
emotionally wrenching task. Most of the stuff I shucked on leaving DePaul was
the unnecessary detritus of your typical middle-class life - like fancy, never-used dishes from Grandma. Now I was dumping stuff
that mattered. There were my brother’s sculptures and my mother’s photographs,
a closet full of colorful, eclectic clothes, gold earrings I bought in
Ethiopia, an amber necklace from Siberia, and a string of ivory elephants my
dad brought back from his first trip to Nigeria in 1963. There were read and
re-read science fiction and children’s books, travel guides, world music CDs, the Madame
Alexander doll my mom gave me for my fifth Christmas so I wouldn’t ask for a
Barbie, and the so-o-o comfy, blue armchair I bought with my first paycheck
from Arco Alaska. My car, my
computer, my blankets: the list was daunting. But of course, it wasn't really the giving up of objects
that hurt. It was the releasing of what those objects symbolized - the self I
had spent 50 years creating, getting to know, grieving over, and finally
loving. Yet, I did it. I let go of the
objects and the memories those objects represented.
When I left the monastery, I thought, "That was
way too hard to do in the first place to turn around and undo it now. I'm not getting the job, the
house, and the possessions back again."
Fast forward half a decade, and I want to do just that - if
I can - well, not the objects, but the rest of it. I already have the house.
Now I am applying for jobs.
I still miss the dynamics of academic life. I miss going to an office and being part of a work group. I miss students. I miss tussling with intellectual challenges. I have all these skills that I rarely use. So I want to return. Maybe that is impossible after such a long hiatus... in this economy... in a town full of young, under-employed academics, but I am going to try.
I still miss the dynamics of academic life. I miss going to an office and being part of a work group. I miss students. I miss tussling with intellectual challenges. I have all these skills that I rarely use. So I want to return. Maybe that is impossible after such a long hiatus... in this economy... in a town full of young, under-employed academics, but I am going to try.
So we'll see. In my semi-employed/self-employed state, it
was a struggle not to accrue stuff. I wonder how that struggle will play out if
(when) I get that academic position.
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