creativity

What Can I Do For You?

A couple weeks ago a friend of mine-let's call them Mary-came to me with a question. Mary knew I was recently retired and working on my writing career. She also knew that my husband was a long-term creative and that we had spent decades trying to balance the demands of my day job with our creative careers and the business side of our creative lives while still maintaining our personal relationship.

It's a struggle we all face: How do we balance the creative, the personal, and the professional?

A full-time creative, Mary was trying to figure out how to interact with a partner (let's call him Charlie) who was considering retirement - and who had offered to become her business manager.

Wow! Is that a situation ripe with possibilities. And I don't mean good ones. I mean disasters of epic proportions. The kind that shake the pillars of the earth; or at least your earth.

Yes, that’s my husband. He helps with a lot of things (including taking photos like this selfie) but there’s a reason he has a warning sign!

Yes, that’s my husband. He helps with a lot of things (including taking photos like this selfie) but there’s a reason he has a warning sign!

I asked, as gently as I possibly could, why did Charlie make this offer? Did he have management experience? Or publishing background? Did he know anything about running a business, or about this specific endeavor?

The answer (I bet you can guess) was no. Oh, Charlie was smart, and had held a responsible, upper-level job in his own field for many years. Charlie assured Mary he could pick this up in no time. Mary, for her part, had faith in Charlie, but she hesitated. Publishing, her chosen creative outlet, was a complicated and capricious business. It was changing rapidly, and there were a lot of hidden pitfalls, even for seasoned professionals.

But even if Charlie didn't flounder in the unfamiliar waters, she asked, what other issues might arise? What things, good or bad, hadn't she thought of? What might the change mean for their relationship?

No one issues building permits for relationships. You’re on your own, so be sure you’re building things the way you want them!

No one issues building permits for relationships. You’re on your own, so be sure you’re building things the way you want them!

And those were just the first questions Mary thought of!

We discussed the issue for some time, and I pointed out several things that needed to be answered before Mary could tell if Charlie's idea was a good one or not. They are the questions we all have to ask ourselves as we navigate the unfamiliar waters of retirement and creativity.

Creativity takes many forms, as I have said before. In addition, each creative has different goals for their particular form.

Let's use writers as an example since it's one I'm familiar.

Each one chooses writing for a personal reason. Some write for a living, some for fame and glory, some to further another career, or as an adjunct to their primary career. For some it's "just for fun," including those that lock their manuscripts away and never show them to another living soul.

Each writer has a different goal, a different reason they choose writing as their creative outlet, and how they approach their writing will depend on what their goal is.

You need to know the answer to those two questions before you can begin to decide whether you want to involve your partner in your creative pursuit. You may be a hide-your-story-in-a-drawer writer, and not only don't you want help with your business, you don't even want a business. If that's you then you don't need to consider any further.

You can hide your creations away if you wish.

You can hide your creations away if you wish.

Do you want an income but want full control of your business? You better prepare yourself to gracefully decline the offer, or practice biting your tongue. A lot.

Do you want to enhance another outlet, like writing articles to share your passion for needlework, or photography? That's another model, and maybe control of the writing isn't important, but control of the photography is.

And if you do want help with the business management, but your partner/sibling/child just isn't qualified to do what you need done? Then you have to decide what you're willing to teach them and what you're willing to overlook in order to accept their offer of help.

Two last things to consider:

First, are you willing to have someone else involved with your creative endeavor? Because if you accept the offer of assistance you are inviting that person into your creative world, and giving them a voice in how you conduct your business and your creative life. How will you handle it when your "helpful" partner tells you gritty noir mysteries are the current best-selling genre, and you should switch over from the sweet romance stories or the sweeping fantasy epics that you love? Even if that is good business advice (and I don't believe for a minute that it is), are you willing to have that discussion, to have someone else telling you how to direct your creativity?

“No, dear. I do not want you to read my manuscripts.”

“No, dear. I do not want you to read my manuscripts.”

Second, please keep in mind - whatever choice you make - that the offer is made out of love, out of a desire to help, and as a way of spending time with you working on the thing you love. It springs from a desire to be a part of your life, to try to share the thing you love with you and be a part of something that is so important to you. 

I am not inside your relationship. I don't know what the dymanic is between you and your partner. But recognize that accepting an offer of help, however well-intentioned, is ceding some level of control to another person, and ask yourself if you are really willing to do that. "No" is always an option.

To go back to what I said at the beginning, there are a lot of ways this can go pear-shaped, and not many that go right. Make your decision with your eyes open; plan for the worst, even if you hope for the best. My advice is to say no as gracefully as possible. 

Your life, and that of your partner, is changing as you transition from your "day job" to retirement. They are trying to navigate that change along with you and find the new paradigm that will give you both happiness and satisfaction for the rest of your lives.

Treat them and yourself gently. Change is hard, and scary, but you're in this together.

 

Writer, Interrupted

 As I said in my first Dispatch this month, I have once again begun giving away my time. Lots of time. No, not the few hours of volunteering I'm doing in the wake of the wildfires, but large chunks of time, day after day.

Can you guess what happened?

Yes, I went back to work.

No, it is not permanent.

I made a decision to help my former employer through a rough patch with some specific projects, knowing it would affect my creativity. It would take time away from my writing, from this page, and from my family.

I chose to give away my time.

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As I said in the introduction to the last Dispatch, I am getting paid. Not at the consultant rates that I might be able to command elsewhere, but above my previous wage. It's still cheaper for my old employer since they don't have to provide medical insurance now that I'm on Medicare, but I'm not working for free.

When I retired in February I knew questions would arise from time to time. After all I had been there nearly 21 years, and my boss for all those years had retired the previous May after more than 25 years. In a department with only three full-time and two part-time employees, that's a lot of experience and institutional knowledge to lose in just a few months.

What we didn't anticipate was just how many questions there would be, and how much help our replacements would need.

My now-retired boss lives 70 miles away, and isn't readily available. I'm two miles away, and my replacement happens to be a close friend starting a new career in accounting. I promised to do whatever I could to make his first job in this new field a success.

That promise is a big part of why I am back at work.

The new boss has had some issues adjusting to the unique aspects of the position, and as a result some annual processes got delayed. My friend tried to help, but he's new to this and it was wearing him down.

They needed help.

After an appeal from the boss's boss, I set some ground rules, threw out an hourly number, and agreed to help - as long as I could work from home. There was no way I was going into an open hotel in the middle of a pandemic (well, except for that whole One-If-By-Land evacuation thing I wrote about earlier this week).

The reasons I made this choice are complicated, and I have fallen victim to some emotional appeals, the lure of a cash infusion for my retirement fund, and the temptations of my own ego.

Some of these may be good and valid reasons, and some may not be. But I am going to lay them out and let you see how easy it is to get sucked back in, especially when you're stuck in quarantine and bored senseless.

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Warning number one: Don't do something just because you're bored. Yes, do something if you're bored, but do something you love, something you want to do, something that makes you happy.

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Warning number two: Don't do it just for the money - unless money is critical, and that's a much bigger issue. Don't get me wrong, money is a great thing, and I am sure we would all like to have more of it. But if money alone is enough to force you back into a regular job, you probably aren't really ready to retire.

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Warning number three: Don't do it out of obligation. You may certainly feel loyalty to your old job, or to the people you worked with, or for. When a problem arises there is often the desire to "fix" whatever it is. You know this, you tell yourself. You can take care of it in no time, and everything will be better. And it will. Until the next time. Unfortunately, unless the situation is beyond anyone's control and is truly a once-in-a-lifetime crisis, all you are doing is delaying the inevitable.

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Warning number four: Don't settle for the first offer you get. You can dismiss all the other warnings (including the next one) and go ahead with your rescue mission anyway. But if you do you certainly deserve the respect and gratitude of your employer-and that should be reflected in the form of your compensation. You are doing them a favor, and you shouldn't sell yourself short. After all, you are giving up the time you worked for, the time you wanted for your creative pursuits, and you deserve to be compensated for that sacrifice.

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Warning number five: Don't let your ego overrule your good sense. This may be the toughest lesson to learn. You know you can do the job, and probably far better than the person who replaced you. Years of experience, years those of us who have reached retirement age certainly have, give you the ability to perform quickly and efficiently. If your old job needs you back they are going to remind you how great you are, how well you can do the job, how much they need you. That appeal to your ego, that flattery (no matter how true or well-deserved) can have you saying "Yes" when you really want to say "No."

The truth is, I have fallen for every one of these reasons. With the current pandemic I am stuck at home. It's a safety issue for everyone, but we can't ignore the fact that we are a high risk group due to our age. That isolation manifests in many ways, and boredom is a big one. I told myself I wasn't going anywhere anyway, I might as well work, and get paid for it. Like I said above, we all would like a little more money. At least I managed to get a bit more money than I was initially offered, and I successfully requested my seniority and benefit accruals be restored.

That covers one, two, and four.

Three and five are trickier because they are emotional hooks that reach deep into our self-image and our self-esteem. It's the same impulse that caused Sally Field to blurt, "Right now, you like me!" It's validation that you are the expert at something, they you have valuable skills and knowledge. That you are capable and valued.

That is hard to resist.

We all want to think we matter. We want to think of ourselves as "good" people, and good people help each other. Good people are givers, helpers, kind and generous with their time and talents.  Good people put others before themselves.

Try telling your self-image that you can still be a good person even if you say no when someone asks for help. Especially when it's someone you consider a friend-and if you've been in a job for any length of time you often consider your co-workers to be friends.

So, I am back to work. I can tell you the boredom didn't last, but I don't think it would have anyway. I have plenty of other things to do, even if I am stuck at home.

The money is nice, and it's padded my bank account, but it's a windfall, not an income stream and I have to treat it that way

Obligation and loyalty are big ones for me. I feel as though I didn't prepare my replacements as well as I should have, and that I bear some responsibility for their shortcomings. This is a second chance for me to do a better job of setting them up for success rather than failure.

I did set the terms for my return, including a guarantee that I would only work from home. Yeah, I said staying home contributed to my boredom, but it also isolated me from exposure to strangers and potential illness.

Ego? That's still tough. I know when I relinquish my current authority I will feel some regret. I can't deny there is gratification in being the white knight riding to the rescue.

But after just a few weeks of long hours I remember why I chose to retire. I look around at the projects that are languishing because my energy and attention are elsewhere. I spend hours at the computer working for someone else and my back and hands and eyes don't want to go back to the computer for a writing session afterward.

Honestly, I am counting the days until I can retire again. And I will come back and re-read this the next time I think it might be a good idea to interrupt my retirement and my creativity. Because it really isn't.

Recommended Reading: Every Tool's a Hammer

Recommended Reading

Every Tool's a Hammer: Life Is What You Make It

by Adam Savage

Sometimes you pick up a book about one thing and it surprises you with something completely unexpected. That was my experience with Adam Savage's book Every Tool's a Hammer.

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Most of the world knows Savage from his tenure on the Discovery Channel show Mythbusters. But he's far more than the guy we saw doing crazy stuff on the show. He's one of the mainstays of the maker movement (of which I hope this column is a small part), a talented graphic artist, and an incredibly creative person.

My husband Steve and I are fans of Savage and his work. We have followed his various endeavors and Steve - a maker in his own right - could hardly wait for the release of Savage's book. It was practically guaranteed to be right in his wheelhouse.

Steve shares many of Savage's enthusiasms: robots, sci-fi, tools of all types (including hammers), organizing and equipping a shop, woodworking, space and spacesuits, movie props and modelmaking. The list goes on and on.

Steve got the audiobook as soon as it was released, and listened to it immediately. He raved about it and kept telling me I should listen to it, that I was going to like it.

Knowing Savage's background in film and TV, and his on-screen persona from Mythbusters as well as his public image from on-line podcasts such as Still Untitled: the Adam Savage Project, I figured the book would be entertaining.

What I didn't count on was a deeply moving treatise on creativity, and the role of creativity in living an authentic life.

Don't get me wrong, there are a lot of very practical parts to Savage's exploration of his life so far, and a lot of behind-the-scenes stories about his work and himself. There's an entire chapter devoted to glue, he rhapsodizes over his love for cardboard, and he has a little rant about scissors. But even those seemingly mundane topics are illuminated by both their relationship to making, and by Savage's own interaction with them.

Nick Offerman describes this book as "An imperative how-to for creativity."

I couldn't have said it any better.

Buy it. Read it. I promise it will speak to you.


Every Tool's a Hammer: Life is What You Make It, by Adam Savage

Atria Books (May 7, 2019) 288 pages ISBN 978-1982113476

Also available in ebook and audio