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A Bit Of An Update on Retirement

21 Sunday Jul 2024

Posted by Steve Mayne in Opinion

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blog, Chores, Do Nothing, guilt, Jobs, life, mental-health, Peace, Retirement, Work, writing

Two full years of proper retirement behind me, so it’s time for an update.

Firstly, do I miss work? No, I don’t miss work. I don’t miss the routine of it, and don’t miss the stress of it, real or imagined. To not have that five day a week commitment, to not have to go and do someone else’s bidding, latterly for very meagre compensation, is blissful, it really is.

But, more than forty years of being part of that culture has been very difficult to move away from at times, and there are moments, more than I’d like, where I start to feel a certain guilt that I’m not fully occupied during a work day. It’s more habit, more trying to shed an ingrained routine, than anything else, but I’m working on it.

I haven’t set my alarm clock, bar the occasional day, since retiring, and that’s very freeing. I wake early most days, but can enjoy the feeling of knowing that my day is my own. Every day, too, not just the weekend. In these summer months I get into my walking sessions, and use that first waking hour of my day to pound the pavements hereabouts. It gets warm in this part of the world so the early start is beneficial, but it is so nice to utilize that early time to good effect, not just to get some exercise, but to listen to an audiobook as I walk, which is about as close to multi-tasking as you can genuinely get.

I still don’t get done as much as I’d like during the day. There’s always the necessary, cleaning, laundry, house maintenance and the like, that tends to get put to the bottom of the list because the tasks are boring and to an extent, pointless. Then there are the optional things like the garden, online time (the biggest consumer of my efforts in day), and finally the projects, usually home related, that I am definitely “going to get around to”, eventually. Overarching all that is my innate laziness and the fact that really I don’t want to be “doing stuff” the whole time because sometimes, and this may be the key to retirement, I don’t want to do anything at all. That’s the conundrum that exists when you’re still trying to divest yourself of the habit of work.

I read a piece in the New York Times recently that said maybe retirees should just do nothing, at least for a portion of their day. They should do it and attach as much importance to the down time as they do to the positive tasks in their lives. I’m beginning to think that the author of the piece was right, albeit that most retirees I’m sure are also locked in this personal debate about thinking that they should be doing something, rather than nothing.

I think that this doing nothing, or the acceptance of the principle, should be my task for the next year. Sure there are things I have to do, things I want to do, and things I ought to do, but doing nothing should be right up there at the top of the list, and have as much guilt attached to it as doing the laundry, or cleaning the house; that is no guilt at all!

The garden is work, but the enjoyment of it is guilt-free do nothing time.

Job Hunting Hell

12 Saturday Jul 2014

Posted by Steve Mayne in Opinion

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Tags

age, discrimination, Employment, Jobs

I’m a fellow of a certain age, not over the hill but I’m a little closer to sixty than I am to fifty. I’ve had a reasonable career in public service and, having jettisoned that for big change in course, I’m now looking for some work to keep me active and to earn a little money.

How hard can that be?

Harder than I’d ever imagined.

It’s a tough employment market out there, I know that. It’s not that I have to work to survive, nor am I seeking to pick up where I left off when changing course. I don’t demand a big salary and I’m pretty flexible about what I’ll do. But why is it so hard to get back into work?

I’ve lost count of the number places that I’ve applied to work; I couldn’t tell you where I have current applications, either, so many have I sent off (in to the ether it would appear). I can, though, count the number of acknowledgements of application on one hand, and I have recorded just one “Thanks but no thanks” letter. The number of interviews offered remains resolutely at zero.

There’s no doubt that my Canadian style resumes and cover letters may have been somewhat off the mark, particularly when I started. They’ve been quite dense, partly because I have much to say and partly because I’m honest, and I think that may have been an issue. I need more white space and more bullet points.

I don’t have a University Degree, which doesn’t help. Its seems that a degree is the key to a lot of jobs, and the fact that I’ve managed thus far without one seems to elude the people making the decisions. My education is from a foreign country, too, and that has some scare value I’m sure.

The biggest resume issue is, though, my age. There are laws about age discrimination but recruiters seem to routinely ignore them and we oldies get automatically overlooked. I’d heard that companies are looking for “thirty year hires” but I really don’t see that. Most companies plan in the short term these days so a three year hire is more likely, but it’s still no more advantageous to the old folk it seems. You’re not supposed to put a date of birth on a resume, with good reason, but when you’re asked to give your educational graduation years then it’s not too hard to work out just how old that applicant is. It might be better if job adverts said that people over fifty need not apply, but that would be illegal, so the hirers just use other means to filter us out.

The issues I’ve raised thus far are only part of the equation, of course. Some of the employers in this part of the world need a really good kick up the backside when it comes to recruiting quality people.

There is a major employer in town who is very prescriptive about requirements and experience needed to get a job with them. Close packed text lists the specific requirements, so tight and so thorough that the only people who could possibly comply would already be working at that company. If that’s the case, why advertise externally? One, public, employer seems to demand such a high level of educational excellence for their new recruits that I wonder how they get anyone at all, especially on the mundane salaries they offer.

Another bugbear is the vocational qualification. There are many healthcare jobs in town but all of them, however menial, require some certificate or diploma obtained at a college somewhere in the Province. I’m all for professional standards, but it rather limits the intake of good new staff when you restrict recruitment to only those who have gone through the vocational education mill.

The biggest and most difficult thing to bear is the wall of silence once you’ve e-mailed that resume. Rarely an acknowledgement and almost never a written rejection; it’s maddening. Certainly, most employers do say that they won’t contact you if you’ve not been selected for interview but, frankly, that’s just not good enough. All applicants put in spades of work when making an application and most prospective employers won’t even acknowledge it, let alone let you know if you don’t make the cut. How hard is it to despatch a two line rejection e-mail? To me it shows what employers think about the great unwashed who are trying to get work; absolutely nothing.

I will round off this diatribe by highlighting one very good experience and one very bad experience. Firstly the bad:

A family member (not me) had been called to an interview for a student’s summer job at a publicly funded body. The call for interview took considerably longer than was promised but it arrived and the person concerned pitched up on time. He answered questions, correctly by the sound of it, and that was it. No further contact whatsoever. It’s shabby treatment at best, but of a fifteen year old, well they should be ashamed that they couldn’t make a thirty second phone call to put the kid out of his misery.

The good was another publicly funded body. I applied on a long shot and my application was acknowledged. They said that they’d not contact applicants who didn’t get an interview but in this case, they did; a two line e-mail, for which I was eternally grateful. Thanks but no thanks is so much better than silence.

I’m still plugging away, I have a few applications in (on modified resumes – white space, bullet points!) so we’ll see what happens. I don’t hold out any hope but heck, something has to stick at some point, doesn’t it?

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