Its 11:55pm, New York time, and Im on Continental Airlines
flight 31 from Newark to Sao Paulo. Theyve served the meal already
I accepted the mini-bottle of Cotes du Rhône and
Ive also popped a couple of the Calmosedans I picked up in Santiago.
Theyre perfect for plane travel, especially red-eyes: theyre
a combinatino of valium and sleeping pill. All the same, Ive
whipped out my laptop, and am writing this.
I was inspired by a sentence in the novel I picked up at the airport
bookshop, Up
in the Air by Walter Kirn. (It was the last copy in the shop,
buried away in the K section of the fiction shelves, despite Christopher
Buckley’s rave New York Times review
and the obvious affinity for airport passengers. I noticed as I was
flicking through the opening pages that Id wound up buying a
First Edition. I havent got that far into it, but Ive
already decided that its an excellent book, and I highly recommend
it: its kind of Brett Easton Ellis for the mild-mannered air
traveller.) The narrator, who spends most of his life on airplanes,
is sitting next to a woman. Id guess her age as twenty-eight
or so, the point when working women first taste success and realize
theyve been conned.
Well, that got me thinking. I was 28 when I left Bridge News (or
BridgeNews, as it later rebranded itself), the company where I could
finally call myself a journalist without thinking I was being economical
with the truth, a company which paid me $5000 a month for my expertise
in capital markets: a key number for me, the point at which I always
thought that a person could be very comfortable, and beyond which
money became a little bit pointless, meaningless, silly. And yet,
notwithstanding the fact that Im male and not female, I did
indeed realise that Id been conned. I knew it at the time, although
I didnt really know that I knew it: it was only after I qui^H^H^Hwas
fired that the truth sank in.
I was miserable at Bridge; I knew that; and the freedom which came
with not having to go into an office every morning; with not having
to answer to a boss wanting to know what I was up to all the time;
with being able to spend any day I liked in bed doing nothing (most
importantly, being able to sleep in in the morning, rather than getting
rudely awoken at 6:30 by my alarm clock); with being able to take
weeks or even months off on holiday; with being able to surf porn
sites on the internet without any fear of repercussion (not that I
would ever actually do such a thing, of course); with interviewing
bigwigs while sitting in my underpants in my living room; with walking
the streets of Manhattan in the middle of the day, enjoying the sound
of schoolkids playing in the yard across the street; with being able
to go into shops during the day and not having to suffer the weekend
crowds; with going into a Citibank ATM lobby without having to
get my card out and swipe it to gain entrance: this was something
Id never really known before, and which I will be extremely
loath ever to give up.
Theres an astonishing work culture where I live: even I fall
into it, and feel weirdly uncomfortable when Ive been with someone
for any length of time and still dont know what they do for
a living. I dont want people to judge me by my job, yet
I judge them by theirs the whole time: I honestly dont think
I could ever be really good friends with anyone in sales.
But I think for Americans, a lot of the time, its worse. Without
exception, the Americans I meet and who find out that Im freelance
assume that the minute Im offered a real job, Ill
take it. I wont, of course, and I think that the headhunters
who were chasing me in the immediate aftermath of my departure from
Bridge realised that. I havent heard from them in months, and
Id like to think thats because they know that now Im
a tougher sell. (Of course, I dont really think thats
true. They just happened to find out Id left, and so did their
job on me; now the job markets even tighter than it was then,
and they probably just have very little to offer me. Besides which,
come mid-September, hundreds of ex-Bridge reporters will be hitting
the streets in need of gainful employ.)
Is it true that the entire 28-year-old workforce is being conned?
No, its not. There are a lot of 28-year-olds out there who either
have a burning desire to make loads of money, or who need the security
of a job. I dont fall into either camp: Ive been very
lucky in that I grew up in a family which placed no kudos whatsoever
on the size of your paycheck, and I also managed to get myself a fabulous
I-1 journalists visa which allows me to stay in the United States
more or less indefinitely.
But anyway, I think now Im going to go back to the book for
10 minutes, and then try and get some sleep. Night night.
I’m interested in investing in airplane notes.
If you are able to help me please contact me
at http://www.holicewiggins@yahoo.com. Thanks!
Regards,
Holice J. Wiggins
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