
In matters of style, swim with the current; in matters of principle, stand like a rock. ~ Thomas Jefferson
Life When You Won’t Settle
So, there is something about me, some people think it’s a stubborn nature, but that’s not really it. You see, I’m not willing to settle on things that matter to me. This is something that permeates my life. At work, I could skate, I could let people’s behavior’s slide, not hold people accountable for their actions or lack thereof, not care if people are working on behalf of our students. I could, when human resources or executives don’t respond to inquiries, I could just let it go. When I see processes that don’t make sense or potential issues coming, I could just keep my mouth shut instead alerting people and working to provide solutions. All of these things that I do, because my integrity matters to me, ends up causing me extra work and extra stress for of course, absolutely no extra pay. I could keep my mouth shut about expertise I have that can help the college, which would mean I don’t end up with extra work doing things like creating a teaching class for career education teachers or writing the only dean’s training manual in the history of the college. But the fact is, if I’m getting paid to do a job there is something about me that won’t let me do anything else but to do what I’m supposed to do. Not the smartest damn decision but it’s who I am.
I’m like this about everything, I’m silly enough or arrogant enough to think that I deserve to have quality in my life. And this relates to everything, friendships, romantic relationships, etc…basically anything that matters to me. It means that I’m a bit demanding on those fronts and in those relationships, but it also means I give my all to them. Which also means that I often find out that others are not as willing to go as far for me, as I am for them. It’s one of the reasons that my circle of friends is very small and why my selected family is not much larger. I don’t believe anyone is entitled to be part of your family just because they are related to you, they need to earn that privilege.
Living like this means that you’re usually swimming against the current, you can still get where you need to go, but it just takes a lot more effort. And right now I find myself in this exact position in terms of my next step in life. So tonight, let me open a window into what I’m doing and who I am. I talk a lot about my life on this blog, and while that’s a picture of who I am, it’s not always the deep dive it appears to be.
So right now, I’m absolutely ready to retire from being a dean in the California Community College system. I’m tired, I’m tired of the constant personnel management aspect of the job, the utter lack of respect and struggles of being a middle manager. Almost everyone gets into education for the same reason, because we care about, and like working with students. As an administrator, those opportunities significantly diminish and you lose the job satisfaction you originally got in the job to get. As an introvert the hardest thing for me to do is to deal with people, and being a dean this is normally about 80% of this job. However, in my current job, it’s more like 90 or 95% of the job. I leave work at the end of each day utterly and completely mentally wasted. And over time that wears on a person.
I’ve hit a point in my career where I have a decent retirement whenever I take it. Staying in this system it gets incrementally better each year, not enough to overcome the stress of staying however. And while it’s decent, and while I love the San Francisco Bay Area, my retirement will not allow me to buy property and live here in retirement. So my plan has been to move someplace closer to family, someplace I’d enjoy living where I can afford to buy property and lay down long-term roots. I have some other criteria around it, I need to work for another three years before I qualify for medicare. So I need to work in order to have insurance and I don’t want to be a dean anymore. But I also have a tendency to isolate and that’s not healthy at all. So I’m hoping to work or at least be very close to a four-year college so that I have theater, arts, speakers and sporting events. Hoping that through that connection I have both things to do as well as opportunities to build a community. I also want a position where I’m much more involved with students and a smaller locus of control so that I both have something I can enjoy working on, but also be able to walk out the door at the end of the day and not be on call or have work rattling around in my head.
So what this means is that on my current job hunt, I’m doing a number of things. First, I’m moving cross-country. Second, I’m doing something that makes no sense in our climb the ladder, always be striving for the top, put success and money over happiness society. And finally, I’m applying for early career positions as a sixty year-old late career professional and often for a massive pay cut. So, having been on many, many hiring committees over my career, I know often there’s that person on the hiring committee who is trying to divine the REAL reason each candidate is applying. And by doing the things I am, I can just hear them saying he doesn’t really want this job, why would a dean be applying for a director position, there must be a problem, etc… So I’m definitely swimming up river in my job search. I of course lay out my reasoning in my cover letter but people often only trust themselves. So my search is taking much longer than I anticipated and it was one of the things that had been dragging my mood down.
The thing is, I could take an easier way out, I could just apply for dean or VP positions. Those are the positions people expect me to be applying for and I’m very good all of the things they are looking for, for those positions. But I don’t want those jobs and being me, I’m not willing to settle. It’s just who I am. And now I’m going to cry a bit while I write because whenever I think about how I don’t settle, I come back to a memory of a dear friend. We became friends at my first college, RIT. We stayed friends after I left and always stayed in touch, visited each other, were very close. Her greatest wish in life was to be a mom and when she got married, her and her husband did a destination wedding and each invited one friend. I was her one friend, and we found a time during that week to be able to sit alone and talk. And at one point she asked my why I never had gotten married. I explained to her much of what I’ve written tonight, however a lot less eloquently but she got it and then she looked and me and said, “I get it now, you’re not willing to settle.” She got pregnant a few months later, had a really wonderful son and then horribly got breast cancer and died a couple of years later. It was a devastating loss.
So I’m caught in limbo in my life right now while I work through the job search and move. I’m fortunate to have a really good job and live in the SF Bay Area, one of the most beautiful places in the world, so I’ll abide for a time. But life is hard when you draw principled stands, and because I’m like this, my life has always been a bit harder than it likely needed to be. But that’s a choice and a stand I have to make, it’s who I am. Sometimes you have to choose principle over happiness. ~ Rev Kane





























