My contract, which was extended through the end of this year, will not be extended further. My boss told me that the current workload is not high enough. I agree. Coincidentally, while she told me the news in a conference room, a recruiter left a message on my cell phone. It was about yet another opportunity.
Having the contract renewed would have decreased my short-term job uncertainty, and assured income for a time. I am relieved it was not. Simply because my boss has been so difficult to work with. She has been treating me better, but when I hear her on the phone it is clear she is as difficult as ever. I have still felt that I need to tip toe around her.
I have been the lead on two projects entirely outside of her group. These are the only tasks I have thoroughly enjoyed. For both, I was given all the information I requested. Everyone involved treated me well. For both of these projects, I received compliments on my enthusiasm and the quality of my results. One of these is still in progress and a I led a review session today. I enjoyed it. This type of experience tells me that I can not only do well in this career but get some fulfillment, too.
On projects within my boss's group that required heavy interactions with other groups, I have also received praise. From people in the other groups.
There is not a single time when I have received more than a curt "thank you" from within my boss's group. The one exception was my young mentor/friend who left for another permanent job about two months ago. He valued my work and told me so. He also defended me to our boss.
I have learned a lot of new things with this contract position, and as several recruiters have told me, being able to list my work for this company on my resume will be a very good thing.
Another very good thing is that I have made friends at the office.
When I left work today, I felt like a weight had been lifted from my shoulders.
Where does this leave me? Certainly I need to find another job as soon as possible. Preferably one that will start before year end or in early January.
While I am getting calls from recruiters on nearly a daily basis, I can no longer count on that method for landing another job. I also need to actively search for new opportunities. There are a lot of openings even now, at the holidays, because companies want to bring on people for projects budgeted for the new year.
I also need to be mindful of what I can reasonably accomplish as I continue my current job. There are limits on my time. I cannot afford to be overly stressed. I need to continue to eat well and get enough sleep. I also need to allow time for fun.
My natural tendency is to expect a lot from myself. I earned my PhD in my forties, working on it full time while I held down a demanding full-time research job. I managed by realizing when I'd had enough of studying or research. Even if an exam were a few days off, if I was feeling stressed I would take the night off. I might take more than one night off. Or I'd take a vacation day.
I also kept the relationship with my ex-spouse on center stage. We still had plenty of time for long talks and spending fun time together.
By carefully balancing work, studies and other parts of my life I made it through the six years it took to earn this degree. Over nearly the entire time, I enjoyed myself. Only in the last six months, when I was finishing my dissertation, did I wonder if the process would ever end.
My first of three episodes of post-traumatic stress, a result of being assaulted five years earlier, occurred in the middle of my PhD program. I worked through this PTS episode by making some very positive things happen. So for a time, I was working on this degree full-time, working a full-time job and basically working a full-time one person local campaign to increase awareness on a certain issue I may discuss another time.
This period was one of the most fulfilling of my life. I was an activist. I spoke to church groups, Tough Love meetings and civic organizations. I regularly worked with the mayor's office of the southern city where we were living. I also had direct and frequent contacts with someone high up in the city's public school system. I got a story aired on the local TV station. I knew beyond a doubt that I was making a difference. People were telling me I needed to continue doing this type of thing.
Somehow, I also managed to continue playing the pipe organ fairly regularly throughout this period.
When I am passionate about something, or someone, I will do whatever I can to advance my case.
As I look for another job, I will keep in mind what I have been able to accomplish before. It was only within the last weeks that I gave any thought to the activist role I once so happily filled. This may be a path I can follow again. If not now, down the road.
I'm writing all of this to remind myself of what I can do when I am passionate about my work. What I am writing is all for me, folks. This is how I work through where I'm at and what I need to do.
For a time, 'X' thought I spoke about such things to impress him. He knows better now. All I am doing with him is sharing who I am. I am totally comfortable with him so I want him to know what matters to me. That's all I am doing here, in a way that also helps me. At times, I need to remind myself of who I am - if that makes sense.
After 6 1/2 months, 'X' knows that I value who he is and what he has accomplished in life. For a time, he wondered what I could possibly see in him. As far as I know, he no longer concerns himself over this. He understands that I appreciate him for exactly who he is. If at times his behavior is out of line (people I speak with all agree with me when I explain what happend

), I am not ready to give up on him. That's because he brings me a type of happiness I have never experienced before. I also have some understanding of where he is coming from.
I do not mind when he tells me "Shut up and kiss me."

In fact, I laugh. I do tend to talk a lot since I transitioned. Just look at the length of this post.
