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Author: glenlyod I well remember how things were before the recession. I always had a lot to do, I was writing for half a dozen editors on a few different subjects, emails floated in with requests for articles and kept me in front of my computer for many hours of the day. I arose early in the morning and I wrote late into the night to keep up with the demand.
Everyone paid their accounts, in full and on time and life was hectic and satisfying. Then came the recession. At first it was called a ‘downturn’, a ‘slowdown’, an ‘adjustment’ and only when it got very serious did it turn into the global recession.
Life changed. For the first time I had to make overdraft arrangements at the bank. Work requests twitched a couple of times and then lay still. I searched around for work but there was nothing. So I was forced to introduce changes in my life in keeping with the changes in the overall economy. I took a crossword break/nap on the couch after lunch. No point in sitting in front of a non-moving computer, is there? I went shopping with my wife to the supermarket mainly to supervise the spending hold-back that I had introduced. I had an occasional morning coffee shop meeting with other unemployed colleagues. And then there’s the beach…
It’s easy to get used to a life of idleness. Bertrand Russell, the twentieth century’s most important liberal thinker, wrote in his essay, In Praise of Idleness, “I think that there is far too much work done in the world, that immense harm is caused by the belief that work is virtuous, and that what needs to be preached in modern industrial countries is quite different from what always has been preached.” I agree. I have come to enjoy idleness.
One day a phone call from my old engineering office jolted me out of my pleasant vacuum. “Can you please be in the office at 2 pm sharp?” I was on the highway threading my way through the traffic at 13:00 for the 20 mile drive. In the office I was introduced to Jerry, “who has joined the organization and is taking over marketing. Please support him.” The office pays me a small retainer just to be around so I nodded blankly wondering where Jerry was going to find a place to market.
Wherever he’s going to market, he’s demanding a whole slew of background work from me. I swallowed, cancelled a coffee meeting with Sid, my unemployed architect friend, and started work. Ten minutes later an email sailed in from an old and trusted client asking if I could do some writing work for her in a hurry? No problem, I replied and added 3 days to Jerry’s timetable.
I am not opening emails nor am I answering the phone. I am suffering from mixed feelings. It’s great to be working again but I miss the life of recession.
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