~April~
There’s always someone panhandling on the corner of Westheimer and Hillcroft—the snowy-haired dude with the limp and robotic, Salvation-Army-Santa hand gestures; the Mexican guy propped up in a wheelchair; the sun-bleached woman with eyes a little too wide and skin so leathery, it looks reptilian—but this one, I hadn’t see him before.
Because I’m stopped at a red light, I’ve got time to examine the man. He is thin, tall, and nerdy looking. Thick-framed black glasses—the kind that prettier people wear to be ironic—slide down his nose. Underneath his non-descript mesh cap, I spy a kempt brown fringe, sensibly cut. Plastered to dude’s chest is a white sign with hand-drawn black lettering that says: “Lost job. Will work. Do not drink. God bless.” The job thing strikes a nerve. He’s a geek—reminds me of every engineer I’ve worked with. I dig through my purse, find my wallet, wrench it open. And: no cash. My pocketbook’s empty, save for a sticky note, some lint and two rogue postage stamps. I sigh and think, if this was a cartoon, feathery moths would’ve flown from the folds.
When the light turns green, I speed through the intersection, leaving the man behind. I navigate a few streets until I find my destination. Once parked, I slip my hands into my pockets and search for hard plastic. I am like the panhandler, except I have this magic card. Nervous, I bring it into the bank and whisper to the clerk, “I’m not sure how this works … I lost my job and the unemployment office sent this to me. They say it’s a debit card and that you can give me money. Is that true?”
The clerk—all blotchy skin and bad suit—regards me with apathy.
As I take the cash, a bloom of fuchsia colors my cheeks. I am embarrassed, defensive. I think, who am I to be pitied? I’m not the stiff in an ill-fitting outfit with the lame-ass bank job. Still, something uncomfortable washes over me. It feels like sadness. It wreaks of shame.
—-
~May~
“I’m having a hard time keeping track of the days,” I tell Mary Helen, my sister in uncertainty. It’s been two months since I lost my job—six weeks since she lost hers, and we are seated on woven wicker barstools in our hosts’, Carolyn and Sam’s cozy kitchen.
“The only reason I know today’s date,” I confide, “is because of the holiday.” I shrug as I speak, smooth a wrinkle from the white linen pants I paired specially with a blue-striped tank and red beaded necklace. Mary Helen—dressed not-so-festively in pair of plaid-patterned board shorts and a white t-shirt with an oversized fedora and the words KING OF POP splashed across the front—nods; she understands all too well. Above our heads, a delectable bouquet of fresh-grilled Cajun sausage and slow-cooked brisket haloes. We salivate, and in my thoughts I muse, there is such thing as a free lunch. You just need to lose your job first.
—-
~June~
Ten weeks I’ve been unemployed and inside me there’s a tectonic shift; the terrain of fear I’d been laboring under, so desperate to keep my job in a lousy economy, is shattered. In fear’s place, (most days) lies an acceptance of what is—that I don’t have a job and that I am still OK—and a curiosity about the future. Where will I work next? How long will it take to find something? Will I be a contract worker or full-time employee? Will I still write for a living? If I don’t write, what will I do? Will I find work in Houston? Should I return to the northwest? These are the questions that bubble in my brain as I lounge by the pool, a golden, sweat-glossed goddess, luxuriating in the fact that I have nothing better to do.
…
Before the calendar flips to July, I’m shaking hands with strangers in a new office. My new office. First day of work and a sensible tab-sleeve blouse and black lattice-top wedges replace the swimsuit and flip flops that were the uniform of my unemployment. As I arrange my desk—carefully placing a framed photo of Andrew and I in the space next the metal caddy brimming with highlighters, pens and company-branded post its—I stop and smile. I realize that losing my job … well, it wasn’t much of a loss.














Beautiful….
I love how honestly you tell your stories. Hugs to you, friend, and hip hip! for a new workspace (and workplace!) to call your own.
Yeah for Hanni’s new blog. Yeah for wisdom gained and new found employment. I remember 40 (um, yes that is the correct number) years ago I was starting my first regular job at a local A&W. After school of course, I was 16. Sitting in my best friends kitchen, feeling nervous, wondering what the experience would be like. Carols dad said not to be stressing, said that it would likely be one of many in my lifetime.
Being in his 70′s, I believed him, and just let the day happen.
Still good advice. Thanks for sharing your news and times.
Welcome back Hanni-hoo! Missed you-and congrats on your job.
I am sure your tan is still lovely.
Your life is an adventure, and it seems to me that you’re living it quite well. Keep up the good work!
congrats on the job!!!