Many people feel uncomfortable stating things in plain speech. “It was his time to go,” they say in low tones, when really they mean died. “Reviews were not perhaps as stellar as we’d hoped” — meaning, more accurately, Got panned. And of course, there’s always “relations.” My least, least favorite.
Well, luckily or perhaps unluckily for some, I am not really one of those people. I feel much better, much more comfortable, saying sex; dead; We failed. And so what has been making me uncomfortable, what has actually increased my feelings of squirm, is finding myself using euphemisms.
In particular, about being jobless.
Somehow, I have little trouble with “My dad died.” Don’t get me wrong: it is not a fun thing to say. But I guess, in the spirit of my father himself, it feels disingenuous to say even “passed away.” The prevailing notion, I suppose, being Tell it like it is. So it seems shocking that, when it comes to my lack of employment — something far less sad, large, permanent — I can’t bring myself to state it clearly. Not, anyway, in New York.
At every party, when the conversation turns to Career — and here, it always does — not only do I find myself beating around the bush — something I’m not wont to do — but touting one particular aspect of life in PDX.
“I’m just focusing on writing for now,” I would say at a party in Portland. “Still settling in, taking a break from regular work for a few months, and starting to volunteer at this community-based acupuncture place.” To which almost every single person in Portland would say “Great!” or Wow!” or “Tell me more!” Followed, more often than not, with a story quite similar to mine.
It’s a very low-stress conversation, perhaps in part because of the understanding that Portland boasts no jobs to be had in the first place (see: NY Times every two to three weeks), but also, to a large extent, because the culture is simply not one of career judgment. People don’t feel that you “are” your job, or they theirs. There is not the assumption that you “aren’t making it” if you’re not on some easily discernible career trajectory doing big impressive things. People’s positive reactions to writing and volunteering (and — let’s be honest — sleeping in) are real.
But. New York.
In New York, I do not readily say “taking a break.” I do not breezily mention all this and expect an exclamatory reply, replete not only with words of support but a similar story as well. I do not assume that my explanation of “what I do” is going to excite anyone, but rather leave them looking askance. In truth, I’ve begun to dread the topic entirely.
Now, how much of of this is my own insecure projection, you might say. Don’t we all tend to feel more scrutinized than we are? Am I arriving at parties like that teenager who has one red pimple on his chin but is convinced that every single person will focus on that and nothing else?
Well, yes and no. It’s true that people tend to worry about that blemish, even if nobody else is taking note. (You don’t even have to be thirteen.) But it’s also true that New Yorkers are taking note: that there are, without question, people who stand next to you at a party and measure themselves against you and wonder about your career and how much your rent might cost or whether you own by now? and how many fellowships you’ve received and to which countries in Africa you’ve traveled and how much you’ve thought about your 401(k) or your 403(b) and whether you use your Master’s or it was for show.
And and and. Ask you about Your Job. It’s as if we’ve all been trained that this is the necessary and proper first step to any conversation in just about any social setting.
Well, in other places, it’s not.
In Portland, people might ask what you do but not even mean the thing for money; regardless, they certainly don’t mean to intimidate you. If we were to conduct a survey, the majority of Portland conversations probably wouldn’t even enter the And what do you do?? phase for a while. In the same vein, people never beat around the bush. They will be very smart and very talented and one hundred percent unashamed of saying they bartend three nights a week and make music on Wednesdays, or work at a diner even though they have a Ph.D. If and when the conversation reaches that point, the only stress I’ve perceived is when people are hard up for cash, when you can tell they’re worried not about how they’ll be judged but whether or not they can afford Thai food and a new drum set. But nobody seems worried about what their job situation sounds like to others.
In New York, while tripping over my answer to someone’s income-related demand, I sound worried, maybe even defensive. But lately, I’ve also started explaining: If we were in Portland, we’d be talking about something else.