Three hundred and sixty five days have elapsed since I became unemployed. After thirty two years of gainful and eventually lucrative employment, I was let go via a phone call I mistakenly answered on the beach during my holiday. That was over a year ago now and I still recall the mixture of outrage, relief and fear the call brought with it; Outrage because how dare a manager call me from the other side of the world and launch straight into contract-speak about the end of my career whilst I was on holiday; relief because the final year had been a nerve-wracking roller coaster of managing perceptions of my performance in an impossible job; Fear because I have a huge mortgage and no means to pay it beyond my redundancy payout which is beginning to run out.
The world of employment has become a largely inhumane place. I was lucky that I had relatively good pay and conditions. Others have to scratch a living on zero-hours contracts. But even so, that was no way to divest yourself of an employee. It was cowardly and inconsiderate because no consideration is required, at least beyond that of being a decent human being. Even that was lacking here as it seems no longer to be required in a manager. disappointing.
Possibly by writing this in a publicly visible setting, I burn my bridges. Well, I can't say many bridges have appeared to employment so maybe I lose nothing by this. But somehow I find this helpful to write.
In the last year I have completed probably three hundred job applications. Of those, I heard back in the negative for about six, had three interviews and been ultimately unsuccessful in getting a job. I suspect my age might be a factor. In the interviews it was clear I had significantly more experience at a higher level than the hiring manager and nobody wants an employee like that, do they? After some interviews, I received no further response at all. How indifferent and arrogant is that? Well, another sucker will always come along, won't they!
And so here I am, an electronic engineer, chock-full of all kinds of knowledge, speaking passable French and German, 25 years experience in sales with a major tech company, articulate and healthy. And unemployed. One of a number of cast-aside people with skills to offer that nobody seems to want. And yet industry screams "We need engineers! technologists! Scientifically literate candidates!" as if there were none available. And there are. They are just "too old". Perhaps deemed too expensive to too close to retirement to be considered.
Reading the industry press, my situation is far from unique. Indeed, it seems an endemic problem; Skilled and experienced people in their forties and fifties finding themselves surplus to requirements. It seems a shame that this pool of talent is going to waste. But wasted it is.
And so, I resign myself to never getting another "proper" job again, at least not in the sector I trained for. What to do? Oh, I have a plan. I am not sure if it will come off, but what choice do I have? Too old for tech, too young to retire.
It has been a good year. I went round most of Europe in a van (I never told you about that, did I? 4500 miles in a little over a month, meeting lovely people, some of them from here! Perhaps I should write some of that down) toured Scotland and lived on a beach at the foot of a mountain by the sea for days on end. I spent weeks this summer in Cornwall bobbing about in a canoe. I landscaped the garden. I made hundreds of loaves of bread and ran a baking course. We built a new pizza oven and filled the greenhouse with incredibly productive plants.
I am really good at being unemployed. I am always busy! But now it's a year and I need to do some work. So, I sit down to my business plan, review what I have to offer and find myself... hopeful. Let's see where my new path leads.
4 comments:
That is a great many applications you wrote, and it really is disappointing to see how you and others looking for jobs are being treated. So far, I have been fortunate in my life in that I have not written more than maybe a dozen job applications, including the first ones after finishing school. But even then I remember some never even bothered to confirm having received my letter, let alone let me know they decided on someone else.
As you say, there is always talk of the lack of qualified staff, so why they don't tap into that pool of talented and skilled workforce in the age group 50+ is beyond me.
It would be great to read about your trip across Europe, and see photos!
"My Trip Around Europe In A Van". There, you may change the title of the book you should write but write it you must! (See last sentence above from Meike.)
Let go of any anger or resentment over unemployment, that stuff is not good for your health.
Appreciate that you have your wits about you and enough money to live on. A secret that many don't want to talk about: once you are 60 and beyond, you almost become invisible. Might not be that way in Europe but let me tell you, there is a book called "No Country for Old Men" and while I have never read that book, I know it is American and that phrase applies to women too.
On that happy note, I will say, take take to appreciate and be thankful for everything, and let the negative stuff just melt away.
And dang it, write that book!
Thanks Kay. Actually, i don't really have enough money to live on. Employment is pretty precarious. That does wake me up in the early hours in a cold sweat. I can't even say I have hope. I really don't know what will happen. I may lose my lovely house. I may get ill and not be able to work. Who knows? But for now, I am happy. I might be in a small boat enjoying the view of the river bank as I drift serenely towards the waterfall. But right now, life is pretty good.
I need to write. I no longer use my intellect for my employment. I fear it may wither away. Whether I write about last year's mini-odyssey is another thing. I am not sure my reflections on places that people not unlike myself call home, the way I call this town home, are of particular interest to anyone. We'll see. I may, exactly a year on, post that day's travel from 2017. That might be a good compromise. Except the Day of the Great Soup Spillage, because my van still smells of decomposing broccoli and stilton......
Here is something that I memorized from an episode of "The Honeymooners", the old Jackie Gleason TV show...
"When the tide of life flows against you
and the current upsets your boat,
Don't think of things that might have been,
just lie on your back and float".
Hang in there, I am sure it will all work out in the end. Now, I am not promising that your van will ever get rid of that smell though!
If you DO write that book, I look forward to it being turned into a great film, and perhaps you will get to choose who will play YOU!
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