Predictably, I'm loving some aspects of the plan more than others. I've been getting up at 6:30am, getting dressed for the gym, having my Bible study time in the living room, and then hitting the gym for an hour. I'm sore every day, but I feel really good about how I'm hitting the ground running. I finally got my personalized plan from the trainer, which I'll be starting next week. It looks intense, but I guess that is sort of what I asked for. This week, I've also managed to shower and get completely dressed each day. It's a good feeling to know I could go to a job interview at a moments notice (not that I've had to). Also, I can run to the street the second I hear the ice-cream truck coming (not that I've done that...cough-lies-cough).
The parts of the plan that are a little more challenging are cleaning, cooking, and actually working. I have managed to clean and cook everyday, but I'm putting a little too much pressure on myself to make new dinners every night. Most of the pressure is because I want my husband to feel like he got a good wife. I know he does even without the plethora of dinner options, but it's also that it's the one thing I can show him that I did each day. I miss being successful. The approval I get through his yummy noises is really important to me.
Cleaning is just a terrible activity no matter how you spin it. It always feels pointless since I know in the not-to-distant future, I'll just have to clean everything again. I'm much better at keeping things picked up, as my husband can attest. I believe one of the first things he noticed in my house when we were dating were the cobwebs. I would love to hire a housekeeper for the deep cleaning stuff, but the whole not having a job thing sort of puts a damper on totally unnecessary expenses. I have actually cleaned some things, but mostly I'm putting off the real cleaning in favor of decorating and organizing projects around the house since I just moved in a couple of weeks ago. I know the list of projects is dwindling and eventually I'll actually have to clean something. Let's pray I find a job before that happens.
Getting down to the actual work each day is the biggest challenge. Right now, I'm working with some career transition coaches and resume experts to fine tune my resume, especially in light of the fact that I may be switching careers. The hope is that when I'm ready to start job searching, I'll have better luck getting an interview since my resume will look so amazing. The problem is, I'm not feeling ready to really job search, and the process of working on the resume stuff is sort of sucking every ounce of creativity out of my soul. Luckily, I'm not succumbing to the pull of the television or social media distractions. But I'm just having a hard time finding the motivation to take personality assessments and craft professional, catchy sentences about my career potential. It's mind numbing.
It's also reminded me of some of the stupid corporate initiatives I used to have to do all the time at my old job. I couldn't help but be gleeful today when I started thinking about all the little corporate time wasters that no longer take up my day. There's a serious silver lining to not having a job. Let me outline it for you in a list I'll call...
Things I don't miss about corporate life:
- Meetings! In my old job, I had at least 1 meeting every day. There were lots of days I had 2-3 meetings, and on occasion I had up to 6 in one day. In 8ish years of work, I can count on 1 hand the number of meetings that were a quality use of my time. Most of the meetings were more like a meeting for a meeting for a meeting for a meeting. And the company wonders why they aren't performing better. Maybe it's because people are stuck in pointless meetings when they should be working.
- Goal setting! Now don't get me wrong, it's great to have goals, but the way corporate America does it is complete bullshit. Every year, I would have to come up with extra projects/goals in addition to my normal work, in a job that was overloaded to begin with. Then a supervisor or manager would review my selections and usually add more goals to it to further their own goals. Then throughout the year, I would have to monitor completion of the goals, and sweat about whether or not I could actually hit the goals I and my supervisor had set. The whole goal thing was fine at first, but as the years went by and the company started to struggle, it became harder and harder to set attainable goals. I had been working on a goal project the morning I got laid off. Now those goals that I had worried about so much, won't be met by anybody, and the world will still spin as per usual. What a joke.
- Team building! This had become such a big deal at my former company in the last couple of years. Basically you take 60 people who work together but don't really know each other that well, and make them go bowling or carve a pumpkin or compete in bar trivia. It sounds like an okay idea in theory, but the reason these people don't know each other that well is because they don't want too. We're all college educated folks. We know how to make friends. If we wanted to talk about our personal lives with each other, we'd already be doing that.
- Unstable stock price! This had become such a silent killer over the last few years. I had been watching the stock drop slowly for a couple of years until the past 9 months or so when it completely bottomed out, Unfortunately, that killed a lot of my bonus too, since I'm sitting on shares of stock which are now all but worthless. Thanks for nothing.
- Vacation requests! Having to justify every request for time off made me feel like the 7th grader who has to ask for the pass to use the bathroom. It's my time, I should be allowed to take it however I want as long as I'm getting my work done.
- Horrible bosses! Now, I won't be naming names, but in my career, I've had far more bad bosses than good ones. I think this is a pretty common phenomenon. Corporate America has a problem with associating good work product with good management skills. Those qualities are not the same things, in fact, you could almost consider them mutually exclusive in some cases. Just because you excel at doing the actual work, doesn't mean you'd be good at managing the people who do the work. Good management skills can't be wholly taught. You have to have some innate ability to manage people before you can be considered a good manager. Your skills can be improved with time and maturity, but some people just don't have it, and as luck would have it, those folks were usually my bosses. There were some notable exceptions. I'm not sure I would make the best manager, but if I were in that position, I'd try to emulate the good examples I've had over the years.
- Office politics! This is a necessary evil that permeates every corporate environment. But at my former job, it had gotten so bad that I had finally just given up playing the game altogether. I'm not sure if you can tell, but I'm an opinionated type, and that doesn't always work so well in a corporate setting. I'll seldom leave you wondering what I'm thinking, but at my former job, people mostly wanted to hear their own thoughts and ideas parroted back to them. I'm not a wind-up monkey doll. I don't pick up choreography very quickly. I prefer to march to my own drum and have my own opinions. If I think the plan is stupid, I'll tell you so in as diplomatic a manner as is possible.
Here are my accomplishments as of late:
- 6:30am wake-up call answered daily - Major win!
- Bible study every morning - This has been great, and I'll expound on that more later.
- Gym for an hour every day - something hurts every afternoon, but that just tells me my time has been well spent.
- Dressed for success every day - this is really good for me, and helps keep me from pursuing napping as my new profession.
- Job search strategies and networking class - This was offered through the transition service and I took it on a whim. It wasn't bad.
- Worked on my resume
- Took some personality assessments through the career transition service. Found out that I'm well suited for the kind of work I already know how to do. I was hoping it would tell me my calling was to be a stay-at-home wife. I would have also accepted librarian. 0 for 2.
- Redecorated the guest bathroom
- Decorated the hallway
- Updated some items in the master bedroom and bathroom - my poor husband has to come home every day and wonder what will have changed. Lucky for him, I'm almost done.
- Signed up for a CLE course - I'm short a few hours for the year, but I can't go losing my law license now! Thankfully this conference was much cheaper than I had anticipated and will take care of my training deficit.
- Updated my info with some professional organizations.
- Did more budget updates - more on this in a future post, but suffice it to say, we're doing just fine.
- Made dinner - This week's menu includes lasagna, roasted broccoli, tacos, ham and beans, cornbread, chicken noodle soup, brownies, and banana pudding. My husband is happy and fed, mission accomplished.
- Household errands - got a winter coat (because I legitimately needed one) and handled some more wedding gift returns/exchanges
- Wrote this blog
- Mulled over a possible novel idea - Nothing has been written yet, but it's amazing what your mind will come up with when you're trying to avoid writing a personal branding statement for your fancy new resume.