Saturday, May 12, 2007

Look Into My Pickle Jar. Pretty Isn't It?

“When I grow up I want to be a banker like my daddy.

And then I want to start my own bank that will be bigger and better than his, and make him beg me for mercy.”

– Bitchy, age 7


Things 've changed. Not where being twisted is concerned (I still am). But I no longer want to be a banker.

Now, I have no clue what I want to be. I don’t know which way to go.

With 'good job' (that starts in just under a year)?

Or with 'no job'?

An odd choice when you think about it. Some would even say it wasn’t really a choice. For many, money (or is it the survival instinct) dictates which way they go. When faced with good job vs no job, they choose the former. Duh!

If I'm being real, 'no job' doesn’t really mean no JOB! It just means no job right now. My C.V. is brilliant (I don’t like to brag, but really it is! Hehe) So honestly? I would have absolutely no trouble getting another job.

'Good job' is the job I moaned about in my first ever blog post. Many law students are desperate to be in my boat, but I’m now getting pretty desperate to get out of it.

Here are my two reasons why:

1 - It's not my dream job.
I won’t suck at it. If I put in the effort, I could probably get bloody good at it. But it doesn’t interest me. Here’s an example. Two weeks ago when I met with partners and managing associates from the firm, I noticed that as soon as they began to talk about this and that huge deal, and Sakhalin this and that, I tuned out. I didn’t even notice it happening! I tuned out right then and there. Imagine the disaster that would've unfolded if one of my future bosses had asked me a question at that point? And can anyone explain how I will be able to do a job when I can’t even listen to future colleagues talk about it in an informal setting? By the way, I also tune out of my lectures that are centred wholly on preparing me for this line of work on a regular basis. Back in February, I even allowed myself to walk into a series of exams with the knowledge that I could potentially fail them, for the first time ever in my life. I did literally no work. I blogged, read magazines and did maybe about five hours of revision in the week leading up to the exams. Kindly note that these were Law School exams that many of my ‘comrades’ had been gearing up for since December! These were Law School exams that many an intelligent student had failed in the past. Somehow, I passed (told you I’m smart!) but I only just did.

2 - My relationship.
How will it survive my job? It’s already difficult enough as it is. Long-distance is no easy thing, and so far Mr. Y has handled it pretty well. But the thought of us struggling to stay afloat for another three to four years whilst both working incredibly insane schedules, is scary. Right now, he works like a maniac and I do absolutely nothing with my time. This means that whenever he finds the odd 5 minutes or so to breathe, I am ready and available for a phone call. It’s also meant that I’ve been able to hop back to Lagos at random junctures in the past few months, in the effort to keep our relationship alive. When I start to work longer hours than Mr. Y, and possibly even weekends too, how will we survive? (Obviously we’ll survive, but I mean the relationship – how will the relationship survive?) And when it becomes impossible for me to go to Lagos, and for him to come here, how will we be able to continue to feel as strongly as we do about each other? That kind of distance just could not make our hearts grow fonder. It just couldn't.

The pickle here is though, that if Mr. Y hadn’t come onto the scene however many months ago he did, then I probably would’ve pushed Reason 1 out of my head and gotten over it. I would’ve spent the last few months psyching myself into falling in love with the idea of a high-powered job, truck-loads of money, and don’t-fuck-with-me power suits.

I feel like such a brat. Many people are working jobs they despise. They’re busting their asses to make an extra buck, and working over-time in the process. Yet I'm thinking about giving up good job when I don’t even have a viable alternative to it! If I did have an alternative, this might not be so difficult. I could turn to my daddy and say “daddy I’m going to be a singer, will you pay for singing lessons and buy me a jazz club?” (Obviously I couldn’t, my dad is not an idiot! But you know what I mean.) I’d be able to suggest something else that I’d be doing with my time instead of good job.

Am I stupid for wanting to wait until I find the thing that makes me tick rather than plunging into good job and being miserable both in my work and personal life? Especially when you consider that if I take some time out, and the search for the dream job and the relationship with the Yote don't work, I will always be able to get another job! It might not be as great or as prestigious as good job (which I really should've called 'great job' from the beginning, I just can't be bothered to go back through this post changing it). But I will still be able to get another good job.

What I don't think I'll be able to get is another Yote. Don't get me wrong, I'm not one of those stupid little girls who thinks she's going to marry every single guy she happens to fall for. But Mr. Y makes me happy in ways I never thought possible. And even though I can't be 100% certain we'll be together forever, I just don't want to put us in a position that even Romeo and Juliet would find impossible to get through ...

11 comments:

culturalmiscellany said...

My Mum and I have just read this post and Mum reckons you are me writing under another guise. I know you know this but I am in a very similar position to you. I am also sure that you know I am going through some difficulties with it. I can't say there's a rosy solution (if you find one please direct me right there) but the process you're going through is normal (both career wise and relationship wise) and is ironically the most serious personal development I have gone through in my life. All I can say is hang in there.

The only one thing I would say that you may not listen to as you're younger than me and therefore probably more bullish (and you seem more confident of yourself than me) is that you alone cannot hold the responsibility for your relationship working. Just make sure you don't fall into the trap me and many of my girlfriends (older, not necessarily wiser) have done in trying to 'fix' things ourselves instead of just watching and waiting.

Anonymous said...

Wow, this is normal? I thought I was alone!! I understand completely where you are coming from, my advice to you would be if you are indeed young and have the CV to shake the world then save the relationship(don't scream yet) chances are there will be millions of job offers where your beloved is based and you can test the waters maybe work for a year or two and see how it goes, cushy/cushier jobs will ALWAYS be there with a hot CV and if it falls through with the man( which i doubt unless he's a jerk and does not realise you put your future on the line) at least you won't spend your life wondering 'what if'. It probably seems difficult to get your head round but if you are young then you have more than enough time to build yourself up career wise especially in an area you truly enjoy. I would not wish a boring job on my worst enemy! Live for the moment! Good luck with it all though, let's know how it goes!

Anonymous said...

Im with anonymous. I left my yote behind for the degree and MULTIPLE great 'jobs' but theres nothing like having the cushion of a loving man. If he is the one who has been sending/funding your trips. I say go for the y. Even if you went the other way and got separated, he would still want you but delve into a plethora of unsatisfying relationships leaving the both of you ... [insert bunch of confusion, drama and hurting people here!]

ps I like his monster truck as well!

Bitchy said...

I almost wish I hadn't written this post now. Its looking like the ending's going to be a lot more negative than I thought yesterday at 2pm.

@ cm - I'm glad you think I come off as confident :) I'm a much better writer than I thought! Hehe. Though I think you and I 're in very different boats. I don't have the assurance of a 7 year relationship behind me. Good luck with sorting out all your issues too.

@ anon - thanks so much for the advice. It would've made my day if I was as confident about the relationship as I made it sound yesterday

@ anon2 - Lol about the monster truck. And FYI He has NOT been the one funding my trips!! Lol! Xxx

culturalmiscellany said...

Just do what your heart tells you is right. By the ways years passed don't make a good relationship. My relationship has friendship at its heart which makes the being apart hard. I would be careful about assuming you have a good CV, not because I don't believe you have the skills but because life has a horrid way of bringing us all down with a bump. I thought I had a cracking CV but that doesn't guarantee a job in the slightest, hard graft and enthusiasm do! It took me a long time to admit to myself that the job rejections I was getting were because interviewers can see through you, especially as you climb the tree. As a slightly older lady than yourself I say go for your career as, unlike men, alot of us will end up compromising our careers later when we have children so you may as well make the most of these years now. Your man will wait for you I am sure and whilst I don't think long distance relationships are easy they certainly do make you face issues faster than if you're together.

Saying that your head is probably spinning like mine is/was about similar decisions. Sometimes the rest of us should keep quiet and let you follow your gut instinct....

Mimi said...

:) everyone seems to come loaded with advice dont they?? lol. anyway babe,first of all i'd just say be grateful for every situation u r in so
be grateful for the Yote that you have someone to share life with whether far or near, doesnt sound easy believe me i know but what if he isnt there?

and be grateful for the job you dont want....because some people are looking for that job but dont have it (not saying to stay though) and be grateful for your awesome CV that can land you any job :)

i guess we just need a little perspective in life.if you dont have any job you wouldnt be able to fund your trips to see the Yote or feel the independence you need,and if you dont have the Yote,there wont be anyone to rant to,at least not the way u rant to him (i'm guessing you do rant to him!)

besides, who will that chicken be sexy for? eh? lol.

Just be patient and whatever gives you peace,go for it!

Dont create problems when they havent arrived yet (future problems with the Yote),enjoy him now,this moment as you are together.

Just my 2, eh 200 cents.

Jaja said...

The singing in a jazz club bit sounds like a good tune to me.

Ms zee said...

We are in the same boat.... I got accepted into Law school without even taking the law exams and I have full scholarship, I did the GRE's and passed very well, I hate school, I hate research.. I thought law school was it for me but for the last couple of months, i dont think i want the powersuites, the nice corner office at the firm and all the good stuff and yes eveyone around me thinks I am arrogant and not thankful to the maker.... sigh**** I am afraid I cannot help for we are in the same boat...

CandySprinkles said...

I think your career choice should be your decision and yours alone. Follow your gut instinct. What makes you happy? What sacrifices are you comfortable making? Some people would rather work long, miserable hours so long as the money is good. This is the path I have chosen once I'm done with grad school. It's my decision - I get to live with it. I've made peace with the fact that I will have no life (and probably no man) but at least I will have financial independence and security.
I, personally would not compromise a career decision for a man unless I was 100% sure that he was indeed the one. My friend got accepted into one of the best medical schools in the States but opted instead to go to a smaller, not-that-great school because her boyfriend (who she'd dated for 6 years) didn't want to do long distance and wanted her to be closer to him. They've since broken up and she's still at the not-that-great medical school.

jadedjune said...

ewww....the sight of those pickels......ewww

;-)

? said...

There is no way to escape destiny.

I think one can hear all the pickles shrinking down in terror and crying:

Biggest pickle: '... what’s happening, what’s happening!?...'

Bitchy: “sheeesh...I am eating a little pickle.”