Life

Lessons from Nerd-dom

I was one of those nerdy kids whose favorite pastime was going to school. I liked to sit in the front of the class, raised my hand often, and asked so many questions that even my own mother grew sick of me. I went to a public school that didn’t particularly support the love of learning, though I was careful to choose an undergraduate school that did (relatively) and a graduate school that not only encouraged active participation, but required it!

After two years of graduate school that forced us to question numbers, regard “facts” with skepticism, and break rules, I have found that I am almost unable to hear statistics of any kind without jumping into analytics mode. This happened recently when a good friend of mine started a exasperated conversation with me after she read an article in Time Out New York that lead with “In February, National Geographic published a fairly stunning statistic: There are 185,000 more single women than single men in the New York, New Jersey and Connecticut urban areas combined.” GASP!!! No!! How could this be??? No wonder I’m single.

I did some digging on line to find out the numbers behind the numbers. I couldn’t find comprehensive numbers of single men and women in the tri-state urban areas so let’s assume, absolute worst case, that the entire 185,000 singles gap between the genders live in New York City. Here’s how it breaks down:

2.9 million single men live in New York City. 1.75 million of which are “unattached”, meaning they are not in a serious dating relationship.

Since the population is fairly evenly split, let’s assume that there are also 2.9 million (plus the additional 185,000) single women in New York City. That’s roughly a total of 3.1 million single women.

Also, given that our population is evenly split, let’s assume that there are an equal number of men and women in New York City. The total population of NYC is just over 8 million. 4 million male, 4 million female.

Basically, we are getting ourselves all wound up because the 72.5% (2.9 million / 4.0 million) of males in New York are single and 77.5% (3.1 million / 4.0 million) of females are single. Are you kidding me? A worst-case 5% differential is a “stunning” statistic? On principle, I am boycotting Time Out New York until they get someone on their staff who can work a four function calculator and doesn’t abide by the principle of “let’s twist some numbers around to create sensationalism to sell more magazines!” Ridiculous.

Single ladies, get out there with your head held high and have some fun. Don’t get bogged down by people trying to tell you that you’ll be single forever if you stay in this city. Bologna. There are 1.75 million unattached men in New York for you to meet – you better get a move on! That’s an awful lot of dates.

Life

Howling at the Moon

Some of you may know that I have had lifelong insomnia. I get it from my mother, who has also had lifelong insomnia. All these years, people have just assumed that I have a good work ethic when in actuality I can’t sleep with any semblance of regularity. Since one of my pet peeves is idleness, I try to be productive at almost every minute. It all started when my mother began driving my father to the train station very, very early in the morning so he could go to work in New York City. This happened as far back as I can remember. I would hear them wake up – my father had this strange notion that once he was awake so was the whole world (or they ought to be) so he could make as much noise as he pleased. So, my mom and dad would head off to the train station, I would wake up, make myself some oatmeal, and when my mom came back we would watch I Love Lucy reruns. My insomnia was born.

As a teenager, it drove my crazy – literally. I thought not being able to sleep was just about the worst kind of hell a person could live through. And then an amazing thing happened – I made my peace with the condition, it subsided slightly (I can usually get, on average, about 5 hours of sleep now, though I wake up quite often during the night), and I learned how productive I could be since the lack of sleep did absolutely nothing to dampen my enthusiasm or need to be useful.

Now I have a new reason for my insomnia. My new job. Now, it’s not what you’re thinking. I have had some good jobs, great jobs, in the past. And I’ve had some really lousy ones; I’ll take a moment here to apologize to those of you who had to receive my phone calls when I occasionally had to be talked down off the proverbial ledge because my work situation was so unpleasant. This new job and my situation there is a different case entirely.

I love this job. It’s amazing – I get there, I have fun ALL DAY, and when I leave I can’t wait to get back to work. There is always something new to learn, and there’s no end of that in sight. I never knew I could love a job this much. I had no idea a job like this even existed, much less did I ever think I’d be able to call it my own. My lovely boss keeps apologizing that he’s not spending enough time with me when in fact he’s giving me more guidance, support, and encouragement than any of my other bosses ever dreamed of giving me! This is the longest commute to work I’ve ever had, and the only thing that upsets me about that is that it cuts into the time that I could be at work learning. Oh, and they’re paying me. How did this happen? Where did this gift come from?

A number of years ago, I read a book called Women Who Run with the Wolves. In this book I first came across the phrase, “She who does not howl will never find her pack.” I got my current job because I howled so loud that the whole world heard me – you may have heard me also and just mistaken me for a coyote of some sort. After months of job searching and not finding what I wanted, I went into my career counselor at Darden and described the exact job I wanted – “in retail, working on innovation as a project manager, in the New York metro area. New product, new services, new store design. Anything new that adds value, I wanted to be a part of it. I want it to be a fun product category that I can relate to. I’m interested in improving anything that touches the customer – which is just about everything. I’d like X number of dollars, I’d like to start in July or so, and I really need to have a boss who believes in me and values my experience.”

My career counselor, bless her heart, said, “Christa, that sounds amazing. What a great position to have. I just don’t know where you’d find it or how you’d get it.” In a few weeks time this same person would provide me with the contact to get me this exact job – the job I have now. And then when I called that contact at my company, he asked me to pitch what I’d like to do and how my experience might relate to my career goals. I howled again, even louder than I did the first time. I was completely terrified, and I just couldn’t help myself. Finally, finally, something inside me broke and I was no longer able to settle for just A job – I needed a place where I could make an impact, I needed to be in a place where all my skills and abilities would be completely maxed out. I needed to be in a place that needed me.

I wonder if in every life this happens – when some dream, some idea takes hold of you and you just can’t help but live it. There is no plan B, there is no substitution. There is no room inside your heart for settling for whatever life offers you. You want what you want and there is no substitute. There must be a point when howling is just about the only thing you can do, and your pack comes running. My friend, Monica, told me a long time ago that time and time again in her life when she made a leap of faith, the world always seemed to stretch out its hand to grab hold of her and pull her up to safety. In my mind, I see the image of that outstretched hand coming from the moon, answering my call to help me live the life I imagine. If you haven’t already, I hope you’ll give it a shot. You may be surprised who hears you.

Life

Girlfriend, let me tell you…

Say what they may about Suze Orman, she calls a spade a spade, even if everyone else around her wants to believe it’s a diamond. Yes, she’s loud, a tad obnoxious, and well, kind of a know-it-all when it comes to financial planning. She doesn’t have the grace of of Jean Chatzky (who I also think is wonderful) and that’s completely fine in my book. The fantastic thing about Suze is that she doesn’t believe in putting off any problems today in the hopes they will either a) be dealt with later or b) magically disappear. “Girlfriend, ” she always says on her TV show, “this is what we are going to do TODAY….”

Over the past few weeks, I’ve been reading two of her books: The Money Book for the Young, Fabulous, and Broke and Women and Money. While I have an MBA from a top-notch school, I am not a CFA (certified financial advisor). Suze’s books are easily understood, entertaining and informative, regardless of your educational background. Through her website, she lays out a personal plan for you to get your financial life back no matter what your age, income level, or financial past.

I hesitated to write this post promoting Suze’s books. As a general rule, I dislike any writing that comes off as if the writer is standing up at a podium preaching his or her beliefs. I am making an exception here because I care about you and your future. Recently, I was talking about these books with a very friend of mine who is in a financial bind. The friend said he couldn’t bear to read them because he was too scared to see how desperate his situation really was. And then I was scared for him. How could he ever get control of his life – be it his career, his personal life, his future – if he couldn’t wrap his head around the steps he needed to take to get out of debt, improve his work situation (meaning his salary), and live the life he so earnestly imagines for himself?

I know debt is frightening. I know finance can be an intimidating subject, especially for those who have little or no training on the subject. I grew up in a very poor household, constantly worried for as long as I can remember that the lights wouldn’t stay on, that we wouldn’t have heat, that there wouldn’t be enough food to it. And many times, those lights went out, we didn’t have heat, and there wasn’t any food. I get it. Honestly. We do not have the luxury to hide behind our fear of finance, our excuses of why we can’t save any money. Time is ticking, and it’s the most precious resource we have.

Just a few more thoughts before I step down from this soapbox I’m on. Getting our finances in order and establishing financial freedom may just be the greatest battle we ever undertake because we have to fight ourselves to get on, and stay on, the straight and narrow. There are retail temptations everywhere and it’s okay to indulge them once in a while, so long as we are also working to provide for ourselves down the line through savings, investing, and paying down debt. If you are like my friend, and afraid to take a peek at your real financial picture, buy Suze’s books and read them, even if you have to have a highball of scotch next to you to get through them. And call me, email me, regardless of the day or time. If you’re in trouble and you need someone to help you through those first difficult realizations, I’m here, and I’ll hold your hand every step of the way down your road to a brighter future.

Life

Sicko

As a general rule I avoid politics. My first job out of undergrad was working as a Legislative Assistant for a Congressman in Wahsington D.C. My first day on the job, the Monica Lewinsky scndal broke and the issue I covered for the Congressman was “executive branch activities”. A total nightmare.

Yesterday was the first time I registered with a political party (previously I was the registered as an ever-mysterious NE – non-enrolled.) However, given the importance of the upcoming presidential primaries, I felt I had to be a part of that. I finally had to stand for something in politics. I believe we are about to witness possibly the greatest turning point the executive branch of this nation has ever seen.

It is with this new found spirit of activism that I went to see the movie Sicko, Michael Moore’s latest creation. I’ve never seen one of his films, largely because they are so political in nature. This one was not partisan – it was raising the alarm on what’s happening in our nation’s health care system. And it’s frightening. It would be comical if it weren’t so true and so sad. Moore made me laugh, and then he made me think. Why does nearly every other developed nation, and many not so developed, have better health care than we do? Why do prisoners in Guantanamo Bay, many of them known terrorists, have better health care than most working class people in this country? Cuba itself has a better system than we do? Given our abundant wealth, how is that possible?

I won’t give away parts of the movie because I hope everyone who reads this blog will see the film. If you have even the slightest bit of interest in health or health care, please see the film. Because I just graduated from business school, I am obsessed with efficiency and incentive structures. We’ve got it all wrong here in the U.S. We reward insurance companies, hospital, and even doctors themselves to provide as little care as possible in order to take costs out of the system. For all the talk about a “paperless” office, there are more and more forms every day that we must fill out in order to receive even mediocre care.

Moore sounds the alarm with humor and solid research. And I hope it’s an alarm that will be heard ’round the country by the people who can make a difference.

Life

My Year of Magical Thinking

I am reading The Tipping Point. I know that Malcolm Gladwell is now a revered man and that nearly everyone in America has read this book, as well as its sequel, Blink. I had never gotten around to it until now.

The Tipping Point sounds to me like a point of no return, the point at which you cannot dial back life’s clock to five minutes ago. The inertia is too strong to be humanly stopped. Nature will take its course, with or without our consent. As one of my graduate school professors liked to say, “It’s happening folks. It’s happening.”

The tipping point can be positive or negative. Hush Puppies are fashionable again. The crime rate sky rockets over night. Both have a tipping point.

I am also reading a book entitled Stumbling on Happiness. It’s led me to consider whether or not there is a happiness tipping point that we stumble upon. A moment in which we find that our lives are overflowing with joy. In yogic terms, this would be the point when we are in sync with the energies of the universe. We feel as if everything we touch turns to gold. We are coookin’ with gas. (I’m only on page 50 so Gladwell may address this later on in the book. If he does, please don’t tell me. I like surprises.)

This morning I spent a few hours walking around what will soon be my new neighborhood. And I am deliriously happy with it. If two years ago someone had told me that I’d be living on the upper west side between Riverside and Central Parks and working for the most fun company in the world doing exactly the work I dreamed of doing, I’d have asked how much that life costs because I’d need to buy it. Lives like that don’t just happen, right? Thankfully, I was wrong. They DO just happen. Somehow all the ducks got in a row, into one gorgeous, perfect line just when I needed them to.

In my state of happy delirium, I took myself downtown to the theatre district. I had a ticket to see Vanessa Redgrave in The Year of Magical Thinking, a play based on a book with the same title by Joan Didion. I read the book in March of 2006 while on spring break, just as I turned 30.

And that was the beginning of what would be a very rough year for me. I would learn that some people whom I considered close friends were anything but. I thought the man I was dating was the love of my life and instead he broke my heart in a million pieces. Later, my mother was diagnosed with breast cancer and my sister with cervical pre-cancer. And I would interview for what I thought was my dream and learn through the interview process that it is the last place I’d ever want to be employed. All of this could generate a good deal of self-pity, something I refuse to have regardless of circumstances. So I did the only thing I knew how to do – I kept going, and showing up, and smiling.

In her book, Ms. Didion considers how fleeting happiness can be. One minute we are overjoyed with life, and then the next minute, everything has fallen apart. We search for clues, for answers. How and why did this happen? How do I get back the life I had seconds before. She is talking about a tipping point of sorts, too.

I don’t know if there are ever signs of drastic change that we can see coming in our own lives. It’s possible we are too close to the situation to tell. It is possible that denial is too powerful to allow us to even entertain the thought of change when we are so happy with the way life is, in this moment. Maybe we can’t control or contain happiness. Maybe it is bigger and stronger than us. It is possible that while it may be within our reach, it will never allow us to actually catch it and hold it. The most we can hope for is to be in its company for a little while.

There is one certain thing I have found about happiness – it always returns. Even if only for glimpses of time, with long gaps in between, for all of us, happiness will always find us so long as we stay open to it, as long as we actively seek it. And maybe that’s the trick. Maybe what we need is to really want happiness to stick around, to want to make it part of our daily lives. Alternatively, maybe happiness is something we need to create and nurture, just like a job or a family or a friendship. It needs attention and care.

It is ironic that on this day when I was so happy to just be living my life that I would reminded by Ms. Redgrave about the fleeting nature of this emotion. In a sense her performance and Ms. Didion’s writing served as bookends to my own year of magical thinking, when so many chips were down that I barley knew what to do except play the hand I had, hoping that the next deal would give me something a bit better. I do know that after this year I am more grateful for happiness than I ever have been before. And maybe that’s what happiness requires – our gratitude. Just like a person, when happiness is appreciated, it’s likely to stick around for a while.