Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Continuity

“I won’t be seeing you for a long while.
Oh, I hope it’s not as long as these country miles.
I feel lost. I feel lost.”

-Camera Obscura

******

I will be returning to Missouri tomorrow. After about four weeks with my old friends and family, one single rather insignificant moment has shortened my sleep.

A couple days after I arrived in Kentucky, a group of us ate at El Mazatlan. As if no one had ever graduated college, found new jobs, moved to different states, or desired any place that wasn’t at the corner of Lexington and Harold Bishop, we snuggled three tables together and doused our chips in salsa. We reveled in the food service, still unmatched near our metropolitan apartments.

We sat facing one another in parallel lines: Mikey, of Glasgow, sat directly to my left. Colin and Sage, of Nashville, at that end of the table. Steven and Katie Frein, now of Michigan, across and to the left. Matt Garrett, of L.A., directly across from me with his new girlfriend. Heidi, of Louisville, between Mikey and Sage. Katie Garrett, of Franklin, sat to my right. Tony, of New York and to her right, leaned back in his chair and said, “Mike. “ I, of Missouri, turned my head. “Mike, don’t moments like this make you want to move home?”

I blinked at him, and said, almost under my breath, “Yeah. It does.” And I looked back at my lap.

Since that day, I’ve sat down to write this blog about ten times. But every time I start writing, I can’t figure out whether or not I was telling the truth.

******

When I’ve dreamt of old age, I woke every morning and had breakfast with this same group of people. For some reason, we’re in McDonald’s. It would be more appropriate for us to sit at the Great American Donut Shop or wake up later and have lunch after many showers and much debate. But it’s always McDonald’s, and I’m not sure why. Maybe I think all old people hang out in McDonald’s.

Or because all McDonald’s are nearly identical; the lobby where we drink coffee and read the paper could be anywhere. Maybe Tony wooed us all to New York or I dreamed us into Portland or maybe we all just settled in Louisville because it’s not quite perfect for everyone.

******

The dream above is complicated and perhaps doomed by this understated fact:

In Missouri, I’ve made friends. Because I’ve not blogged in the past two months, I’ve not talked about them much, but just as I’d like them to know about the meaning of my old home, I want my old friends to know the meaning of my new.

When everyone left me alone in Kentucky last week, I started thinking about how exciting (if somewhat stressful) that every day in Missouri has been. I am immersed: not just in my discipline, my specializations, and the sweets of academic life, but in the lives of a new city and of people I want to better know. When New York, Michigan, L.A., Nashville, Louisville, Lexington, and Franklin all regained one or two pieces of me and home seemed so empty, I remembered that Texas, Omaha, Florida, St. Louis, and Kansas City are to be found in my new place.

******

Friends. Job. Family. (in no particular order unless contextualized). I’ve lived near my friends and hated my job. I’ve loved sociology away from my friends and forgotten why sociology in the first place. I’ve never had my own family, really, but I’m finally old enough to dream about one.

Ideally, of course, I figure out the perfect job, I live near most of my friends, and I meet someone and raise children.

Practically, the new ideal is two of three.

When I left Louisville on Saturday and Lexington on Monday and Nashville today and then when I left Franklin, and Thursday when I leave Kentucky, and eventually if I decide to put an end to this graduate school nonsense, I will have been dissatisfied. The drive kills. Until I decide once and for all and settle for what I can and cannot have; in a sense, when I learn to prioritize or accept my own choices, or rather than looking before I leap, stop leaping all together, or until I think it’s okay to sacrifice one priority for the other or can learn to anticipate the future at the expense of the present (to the detriment of, I should say), I am lost.

*******

I am tired of every goodbye feeling like death.

-Mike

2 comments:

Colin said...

I don't know if you were talking to Sage about this the other day or what, but she said it came up in conversation somehow that you don't think I'd take a pay cut to live closer to my friends and I definitely have to say that I resent the thought.

My friends are THE ONLY reason I currently work and live in Nashville. It's not like Nashville, TN is the technology capitol of the world. I would have loved to pursue a career in the video game industry, but there just weren't a whole lot of development shops in the area. I looked for employment in the absolute closest city I thought I could find a job relevant to my degree. And then what do I do when I get the job? I drive back every weekend to sleep in the floors of the living rooms of my friends, doomed to stay up until the last person caves, and wake up with the first who did.

I spend 2 years doing this as the number of friends I visit dwindles, not because I wont make time for them, but because they are all moving away.

I feel like I'm ranting now....

Mike said...

You're fine to rant. That's all I do. I know that I've made choices to put myself in this position, and yours has gone beyond your control. It's a shitty positions, and I feel bad for my part in it.

The fact of the matter is, I realized when I lived in Bowling Green that just having my friends isn't enough. I mean, you don't love your job, but you don't hate it, right? You make good money, you're setting yourself up for the future. You're going to be able to find new and better jobs (and again, as spread out as we are now, I don't think you should have to consider a pay cut). You can have the freedom to look where your friends are. If you decide to have a family, you can do that. VIA your work interests, you're in a good place to put yourself where you need to be.

Given my current career trajectory, I don't have that luxury. Even if I do get my Ph.D., finding an academic job isn't about just looking in a couple cities. It's about scouring the country for a school that wants your specific expertise. If I don't go into academia, but I want a job that emphasizes my skills, that is still a concern.

I think it's going to be a theme for me in the next few months. I'm seriously going to be looking into the kinds of jobs I can get and be satisfied with outside of academia. That's not to say I'm going to leave, but I'm not prepared to sacrifice the next few years of my life doing being unhappy even if it pays dividends later on...so long as I have satisfactory options. I don't need perfection in a job if I am with everyone, but I also won't hate what I do. I don't know...I'm just working things out.