Sunday, January 24, 2010

Everything Is Temporary

Everything Is Temporary

The drive itself took two days.  My father, much to my unending relief – seriously, the idea still panics me – drove the moving truck.  I had my faithful, ’89 Toyota Corolla station wagon, my suitcase, a laundry basket full of plants, a cooler of soda and snacks, my backpack, a tape player,[1] tapes, microcassette recorder, Loki’s bed, Loki, Ichabod, Mallory and catbox– Dad may have had it easier with the 27 foot van. 
Loki, being a dog enjoys car travel, but was still a little stressed over the whole business, not to mention seriously cramped and a little warm.  She did her best. 
Ichabod is a pretty good traveler for a cat.  As long as he could sit in the plant he nearly killed several times in Billings – he didn’t pee in it, but he startles easily and would occasionally go flying out of it, leaving dirt and plant pieces around – or on Loki’s bed, he was fine. 
Mallory hates to travel.  She roams around the car crying, trying to sit on the dashboard, steering wheel, under the accelerator, my head, etc.  She also seemed to resent that Ichabod was not upset and would periodically pick fights with him, in which Loki would feel the need to intervene.  At least there was no chance whatsoever of me falling asleep at the wheel and as the parental units were in the lead, freeing me from having to pay attention to exits; I was generally able to stay in the correct lane.  On the second morning, Mom suggested catnip.  Aside from a brief fight over who got it first, Mallory was (and is) a much more pleasant traveler while stoned.
Hotels were also fun. For some value of the word fun.  This was actually an ongoing issue.  When we’d hit rest stops, it was necessary to get Loki out for a walk.  Somewhere in Washington State, Mallory fortunately decided to go up a tree when she got free, rather than across the highway.  That was the scariest moment of my life until she got loose at a hotel in Tacoma.  Ichabod only escaped once, but ultimately we all made it to the new house in Spanaway. 
Where Loki promptly claimed the master bedroom for Laurel.  I liked the view in mine better anyway, so I was able to be amused when she walked in that room and peed on the floor. 
Things moved fairly normally after that.  Loki found a dead squirrel in the yard.  I found and patched some holes in the fence and eventually found a part-time job and then some temp jobs, none of which thrilled me, but sort of paid the bills.  Much to my surprise, was even harder to get any kind of teaching job (or any kind of job at all) with a Master’s degree in Folklore in Washington State than in Montana.  Thinking about it logically, that shouldn’t have come as a surprise, there are, after all, probably more liberal arts majors per square foot here than anywhere outside an actual liberal arts college.  But it did.  And a crushing disappointment.
I eventually settled into a soul-sucking customer service job that provided health insurance after six months and not much else.  I was almost able to keep my head above water financially and to hide the times I couldn’t.  And most mornings I was able to get up and go in.
The problem wasn’t really that the company was pretty crappy to work for.  Or that one rapidly learned that once in customer service, always in customer service as the very obviously least valued members of the greater whole.  It wasn’t that the pay was not excellent or that I’m pretty sure my manager was trying to get me to quit.
It was all of these things.  And I would have left at the drop of a hat had I somewhere else to go.  It was that I put nearly all my energy into hating the job and everything tied to it – including myself, my lack of accomplishment in my life and my unfinishable Ph.D. thesis.  Because of this focus, the energy and effort I thought I was putting into the areas of my life I considered important – thesis, job-hunting, writing, family – tended to be half-assed at best, though I didn’t realize it at the time. 
Not that it was all bad.  I made a couple of really good friends there and learned some skills regarding home repair and various product types that are still treating me well.  I had a fairly set schedule and it was better than living in a cardboard box.
Laurel and I explored a bit, went to movies, ate out, became better at our own relationship.  Walked Loki and got a name in the neighbourhood for Ichabod, who ran when he saw people coming, but otherwise would faithfully join us on our walks.  We hope the people who would point and wave as they drove past thought this was a good thing.
The job also had one major advantage.  It was less than ten-minutes from the house.  In Wyoming this was a long distance, in Montana around average.  In Washington it’s a miracle.  And shortly after I took the job in February of 2004 it became a necessity.  Because in May of that year…



[1] I’m a broke luddite with an aging car, I do what I do.