Thursday, June 24, 2010

Quiet day

Work was quiet today. I had lunch with a work friend. I finished up my assignments, cleaned out my desk, and deleted almost all my electronic existence off my workplace computer. I spoke to a few colleagues and gave hugs. Tomorrow morning will be a few more quick assignments, the rest of the computer cleanup, the unplugging of my keyboard and trackball to pack up, and a quiet last walk down the hall, down the stairs, through the lobby and out to the parking lot, where Art will be waiting to take me home.

I brought home the certificates that hung on the bulletin board behind my desk: Dynamic Facilitation Skills for Participative Leadership, Completion of Certificate Program in Software Product Management, JAD Facilitation, Defining & Validating Software Requirements. And a paper mache mask my younger son James made in the 7th grade as an art project (he's now 31).

And an essay I read often. I don't know who wrote it, but it's about happiness. The last lines are

Happiness is a journey, not a destination.

Work like you don't need money.
Love like you've never been hurt, and
Dance like no one's watching.

Art is going to patch the paper mache mask - it's a little worn after 20 years on a cubicle wall - and we'll hang it on the wall by my desk. James will probably be embarrassed to see I've kept it. Or maybe not.

It occurs to me that my workplace skills are transferrable in the wider world: facilitation, mediation, analysis, communication, training. I might be short changing myself if I decided not to use them at all, ever. So I'll remember how to do those things in case I need them again!

I'm a little nervous tonight. My back went out last week, and though it's getting better I decided against going to a restorative yoga class. Instead, I'm sitting in my quiet house thinking about writing - a solitary activity after 20 years in a cubicle. I think I'll feel more like myself when I've finished off tomorrow's four hours.

Tonight I'm waiting for tomorrow.











2 comments:

Sally Wessely said...

I loved your reflective tone in this post. I wish I would have captured the last day on the job by writing about it. Somehow, taking down the mementos that defined our workspace is so final. We put them in a box and walk out the door. Saying goodbye to a job is a hard thing to do, even when we are ready to do so.

#1Nana said...

I still haven't unpacked my box from my office and it's been over a year...humm, that must mean something?

It is about the journey...and some parts of the road are easier to navigate than others. I hope you have a smooth ride tomorrow. Congratulations!