Friday, July 31, 2020
On being the boss, part 2
So in this post I talk about how hard it was for him to be a Boss, how genuinely terrible he was at it. And at one point I remember reflecting on Peter Drucker's observation that Thinkers and Deciders are two different kinds of people. Those who are good at thinking are in general bad at deciding; and those who are good at deciding are bad at thinking. I noticed that this certainly applied to me: it took me years to learn how to make basic decisions. And then I looked at my dad's long history of disastrous business decisions ... and realized ... you know? When he was just spinning out his own ideas -- not playing conversational games, and not playing a role, but just (too rarely) actually thinking on his own ... he was really good at it. For all the other things I have told you about my dad, I forget if I ever mentioned that he was really smart ... even though sometimes he talked himself into supporting (or pretending to support) some foolish opinions. I remember years ago, when the news was obsessed by the tryst between Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky, that there were thousands of editorials around the country churning out what seemed to be the exact same talking points: it was as if there were really only two editorial positions -- Democratic and Republican -- and everybody who had something to say picked one side or the other and rehashed the same old points in new words. Except my dad. He sent me an email that he asked me not to share with anyone else because his thoughts were still evolving -- and it was clear, insightful, and (above all!) totally original. He agreed with the Democrats on one or two points, and with the Republicans on one or two points, and thought each of them was spouting nonsense equally often.
The consequence of Drucker's point, though, is that Thinkers should be employees, not bosses. The Boss has to decide. He should have an intellectual working on staff who thinks through all the possibilities and organizes them for him, but then he has to pick one. And while I have sometimes held a managerial role in my own career, I have always wanted to work for somebody else, for a company that could handle all the entrepreneurship and all the paperwork and leave me to do what I'm good at. At least this far, I have aligned my career with Drucker's insight.
Not my dad. After ten disastrous years pretending to be a businessman, he dropped into and out of a lot of other ventures. But always he had to be The Guy In Charge. And of course they never worked out, partly because he was terrible at being The Guy In Charge.
Why did he do it? I think it's because he hated and feared Authority. Partly that meant that he couldn't bear to be an Authority in his own right; but also it meant that he was (I think) afraid of having a Boss. He was afraid of being in a dependent or subordinate position. And so he put himself, time and again, into a position where he was sure to fail, because it called upon his weaknesses and not his strengths.
I asked Mother about this at one point, whether she saw things the same way and she strongly agreed. She said that back when he was a college professor he was almost a philosopher -- he could think profoundly and creatively about the subject and find new insights in it that lit up the room. But the first time he got an actual three-year contract, it was at a department that didn't want that. They wanted something else out of their professors, a kind of belligerent aggressiveness (that would put this new university on the map) rather than deep and dreamy insight. She said at one point someone actually came up to him in the hallway (maybe it was a Dean, or somebody) and told him "We don't want your kind here." And when his first tenure review came up after three years they dropped him as fast as they could. He never held another teaching job, and never ... now I think about it ... worked for Anybody Else again, after that.
Except that, as an actor, he would always listen to his Director and do what the Director said. But nobody else.
It's sad. Of course he really wanted a career as an actor. But if that wasn't going to work out -- and it only ever kind of worked out -- I think he would have had more success doing what I do, working for someone else so that he could have spent his time Thinking and not Deciding. In some ways he would have been a lot happier.
But he hated and feared Authority. He hated and feared Bosses. That always got in his way.
It's sad.
On being the boss
Being the boss -- I mean at work, functioning as a manager -- is hard for me. And it was hard for my dad.
That's it, the insight: the conjunction of those two statements. I have long known each of them in isolation. But that they fit together so neatly is at once obvious, and totally natural, and really interesting.
For me the problem had a couple of sources. One was my natural shyness. Another was my overcompensating for what I knew to be my own brilliance. I didn't want to look arrogant, or like I had a "swelled head," or anything like that. So I spent a huge amount of effort beating down my own ego and undercutting my own self-assurance, trying to fade into the woodwork, so that I couldn't be accused of being a glory-hog. And it was an absolutely consistent strategy ... right up until I was 33, and my boss suddenly quit from the small start-up where I was working, and I was offered his position. And accepted it. It was a very disorienting experience. Suddenly I couldn't undercut my own status or position because I damned well needed that position to be able to do my job!
I really didn't know how to do this, and for a long time I struggled at it. Fortunately the work my department did was controlled by a number of well-defined procedures; so when I didn't know how to manage the people, I compensated by managing the procedure. Instead of "Go do this today" I could say "We've just finished stage 3 so now we have to do stage 4 (where the employee I'm talking to is the only one who can do stage 4), and it has to be done by the end of the day." It wasn't perfect, but it was something I could hang onto until I got my feet under me. The first time I had to write annual reviews I had huge trouble because I had spent so many years forcing myself not to judge other people -- because I thought it would be unfair to hold someone else to the standards I set for myself, because they couldn't help not being brilliant, don't you see? (Yes, I recognize that beneath the showy humility that attitude is tremendously arrogant, patronizing, condescending ... call it what you will. It also didn't serve me very well, especially when I extended it from intellectual standards to moral ones. That didn't stop me from holding it.) I discussed the problem with a mentor at work who talked me out of it, but I sweated for hours over those reviews!
My dad was just as bad.
As a father he sometimes said that he didn't want to "lay some big authority trip on you," which I think means that he hated and feared authority and couldn't bear to be seen as one. Or, in other words, that he wanted to undercut his own natural authority as my father -- and, like it or not, there is a certain natural authority which comes with that role if you are present in your children's lives, and even regardless whether you are biologically their father -- in the same way that I spent so many years trying to undercut my natural authority as a Smart Person.
Sunday, July 26, 2020
Is this a problem?
Saturday, July 25, 2020
Tehanu on death
Sunday, July 19, 2020
2020 is crazy and I give up trying to guess what will come next
Friday, July 10, 2020
Remind Me Next April
NOTE: I am posting this in February 2023, almost three years late. But I just found (or re-found) the poem on my hard drive, and I want to record it before I lose it again. I am back-dating it to the date I received it.
Debbie and I were talking on the phone, and I mentioned that I had written a poem based on the COVID-19 lockdowns. (Of course I mean this one here.) She remarked that she had written one too, a few months before. We agreed to exchange poems so I sent her mine and she sent me this one.
Remind Me Next April
Next April,
When my being is lazy and torpid
After the long Midwest winter
And all I want to do is
Stay in my pajamas
And read or knit,
Remind me how much
I enjoy preparing my garden beds
for planting.
Next April,
When my spirit is heavy
Because the coronavirus
Is still with us
And there is not yet a vaccine
And many have died,
Remind me how my soul
Is healed when I turn
The earth over with a pitchfork
And break up a dirt clod
With my hands,
Amazed at the rich black soil,
Teaming with eager earthworms.
Next April,
If I am not here,
As indeed I might not be,
Know how much joy
I felt on this
April day,
Standing in my garden
With the sun on my back,
The sounds of lawn mowers
And children playing
In my ears,
Black dirt and earthworms
In my hands.
Next April,
If I am here or if I am not,
Know how much I love this precious life
And how much
I love you.
[Debbie]
April 19, 2020
[Her city and state].
Monday, July 6, 2020
July 5, 2020
While outside the Coronavirus rages.
If you get sick, I hear it hurts like Hell.
It's quiet here -- I like it, truth to tell.
I'll make some tea, a snack, and turn the pages
Of some delightful book here in my shell.
I've taken care to stock my larder well.
It's lucky that I still can draw my wages,
Though unshowered and uncombed I look like Hell.
For those with other jobs this shutdown fell
Like a ton of bricks, as no-one them engages.
That leaves their pocketbooks an empty shell.
And elsewhere crowds of angry people yell,
"Police do murder!" "They lock kids in cages!"
Then tear gas answers. And it burns like Hell.
I wonder if this year will sound the knell
For our Republic, with its hopes courageous.
It's very cozy here inside my shell,
But outside all the world is going to Hell.
Sunday, July 5, 2020
Foolish cooking
What on earth possessed me to do so much cooking on an afternoon in the middle of summer?
Saturday, July 4, 2020
Another year, another Fourth
That's where I was this year, though the visit was a lot shorter. I spent about five hours there, plus about four hours total driving back and forth. (That's 2 1/2 hours going, but only about 1 1/2 hours coming back home. I got lucky with the traffic this evening.) It's funny because I left before we actually ate. But I think it was fine, and that I liked it better that way.
Apparently Brother and SIL have gotten together with my mother a few times since the outbreak of the pandemic. Of course they live a lot closer, and in normal times they certainly see her more often than I do. They say they have been scrupulous about social distancing. Certainly not long after I arrived, Brother gave all of us a stern little talk about how we should behave to reduce the risk of infection. He seemed particularly concerned by my cough, which I suppose is not surprising (even though I know it has nothing to do with COVID-19).
It was a hot day and we sat around outside and talked. Brother and SIL peeled homegrown apples to go into a pie. (My mother makes the best pies in the world, and I refuse to hear anyone say anything to the contrary.) They were also going to grill hot dogs for us all.
Nobody said anything about when we were supposed to eat, any more than I said anything about how long I was going to stay. I hadn't thought about it much. But I knew I wasn't going to stay the night, because how hard must it be to disinfect a whole house? Anyway, Brother and SIL spent a lot of time in their own little world, making cute faces back and forth and snapping pictures of each other on their phones. And some time after 5:00 they started fiddling with the grill. Around the same time I decided I'd leave about 6:00.
It was a propane grill that my dad had used for years before he died. I don't know if it has been used since. Everything they said was to the effect that once they turned it on, we'd eat within minutes. But they fiddled and fiddled some more and couldn't get it to start. Maybe it was out of fuel, or maybe it was something else. Anyway, by 6:00 they were starting to think about what else to use instead, and I figured it was a good time to hit the road. There was considerable surprise ("You're leaving? Before we eat?") but I was gracious and cheerful about it and then took off.
Do I wish we had eaten before I left? Maybe a little bit but not strongly. It really was hot. Eating hot grilled food on top of that would have made it feel even hotter. And I'd had a big breakfast, so I wasn't terribly hungry. Also my mother had put out little individual dishes of nuts, and I'd had some of those. And I'm pretty sure Brother will have felt more comfortable eating without listening to me cough: he had already expressed deep discomfort at my coughing (into my mask!) within a couple of feet of the table where the dishes of nuts sat.
Also ... how much do we have to talk about? Brother is a wannabe rock musician (even now, in his fifties) who does proofreading for ad agencies as a contractor. I work for a big company, in an office. (Or, well, I used to work in an office before the pandemic and lockdown, and I still do the kind of work that one associates with big companies and offices.) I suppose I could have talked about getting an article in print in the professional journal for people in my line of work -- the June issue, a mere 18 months after they accepted it! (Grin.) Or I could have talked about the time I've spent on the side during the pandemic, expanding that article (and some related topics) into a short book. (I have 92 pages now and I think it's basically done, but I have no idea what to do next.) But I hate self-promoting like that.
I don't know.
It's funny: I don't feel anything like this ambivalence about spending time with my uncle and aunt, or with my cousins (except for one first-cousin-one-removed, who looks to me like a demon of Pure Id -- Stan, of course, from this post). I enjoy time spent with them. But I don't seem to have anything to say to Brother or SIL.
I suppose that's too bad and I should regret it. But it's just how it is. I don't understand why it turned out that way. But it did. Shit happens, I guess.
Friday, July 3, 2020
Pro monachismo
Back in 2018 I posted a piece I had written Marie in 2016, about my tangled feelings towards the academic life. I couched it in terms of a reflection on monasticism, and therefore called it "Contra monachismum."
Just now, scrolling through some old emails, I found a link to an article I had found in the same year (2016) in favor of monasticism, which I obviously intended as a counterpoint. You can find it here.
I don't have a quick-and-easy synthesis of these two opinions just at the moment. But I hold both of them, in different degrees and at different times. It's a puzzle.