The update is that there’s really no update. I haven’t heard anything since Monday, when I told Laura that I think Suzanne should be fired.
Laura says she’s going to call me tomorrow to “check-in.”
I really just want to know that my claim of a toxic work environment is being taken seriously — like they’re really looking into it. Because it was very real to me. Suzanne has been such a royal pain in the ass for the past SIX years. I’ve endured the worst boss of my life for six whole years, in my fifties for godsakes.
I want to know that HR connected all the dots from past complaints about Suzanne to my situation. She’s had angry outbursts and run-ins with many people and I want HR to talk to them to get the whole picture of how she acts at work. And I want them to take a look at the exit interviews of Kathy’s three predecessors.
At one point, I remember the organization paid for Suzanne to attend a really expensive management training program, because so many people were having problems with her. (It didn’t work.)
I want her toxicity noted/documented over a period of time.
For my part, I’ve already quit Suzanne. I just decline all meetings she’s attending and have stopped all contact with her. I’m just doing my own work and not worrying about her.
But my ear is still ringing loudly. This is stressful.
I called Suzanne’s boss (Laura) to let her know that I had made a decision. Being scolded like a child in front of a colleague for doing something she told me to do was the very last straw for me. (This is gaslighting by the way.) I’d rather leave the job I love than continue working for her.
Laura kept saying that there were no solutions because of the organization chart, like moving me to a different area was the only place her mind was going. She finally asked what I wanted done. I said that Suzanne has created a textbook toxic work environment for me and Kathy and should be fired.
That really took her aback. She was not expecting that. Her whole demeanor changed. She asked a few more specific details and told me it was OK to cancel out of all meetings with Suzanne this week. So now Laura will go to HR and they’ll investigate. I forwarded Laura a few emails in support of my case.
I’ve never done anything like this before. Never filed, or been part of, any type of HR investigation. It’s pretty stressful. The ringing in my right ear is back and very loudly. And I don’t feel hungry and can’t concentrate on my beloved TV shows.
Now it’s just wait and see. Will they or won’t they?
Invent a holiday! Explain how and why everyone should celebrate.
Facebook is always inventing holidays, like “National Daughters Day” or “National Sons Day.” They tend to make me feel annoyed. It’s like why would I randomly post a photo of my son, who doesn’t even have a Facebook? Everyone loves their kids — we know this. No extra holiday needed.
I think a lot of people need a lift these days, so what would make most people feel better? Hmmmmm… thinking….this is hard
I liked Obama’s “National Day of Service” idea, but I’ve honestly never participated in it. Earth Day is good too. Remember “Hands Across America” day? Another nice idea, but I don’t think it actually worked.
How about creating a national “I Can Swim” day? One thing I really hate reading about every summer is drownings. It’s so sad. Every kid in America should learn to swim. All barriers (cost, access to lessons, etc) should be removed. Every school district in America should have a public pool.
Maybe every kid (or adult) who passes the “I Can Swim” national test during a given year, gets celebrated on “I Can Swim” day with cake, balloons, presents and a big splash party at the community pool?
Yes, I’m liking this idea. Make “I Can Swim Day” as big of a deal as all the other growing up holidays like First Communion, Quinceañera or Bat/Bar Mitzvah. I can say with certainty that learning to swim has provided me with far more lifelong joy and safety than whatever I was made to memorize for my First Communion.
It’s weird how we spend most of our time on apps now, rather than websites. I barely use my personal laptop anymore. Two apps I look at a lot are Instagram and Jetpack. I love reading other bloggers’ answers to the WordPress daily prompt on Jet. Keep ‘em coming!
I mostly go to websites for news and interesting articles by great journalists. I look at The New York Times website quite frequently. And nothing beats The Atlantic for interesting articles by great writers.
It’s very frustrating that both websites have paywalls. As a subscriber, I wish I could share more articles with friends, but unless you send it as “a gift article” (which is inconvenient), people who aren’t subscribers can’t read it.
OK guys, a series of events at work this week has led me to a realization.
The unhinged woman I’ve had to report to since the merger six years ago (let’s call her Suzanne) scolded me like a child in front of a colleague for doing something she specifically asked me to do two weeks ago. Actually, she scolded me for interrupting her while she was berating me for doing something she specifically asked me to do two weeks ago. “I WILL NOT BE SPOKEN OVER IN A MEETING. WE WILL TALK ABOUT THIS ON THURSDAY.”
Following the meeting in which Suzanne wigged, the other colleague (let’s call her Kathy) and I requested a meeting with Suzanne’s boss (let’s call her Laura). Laura is new.
Kathy and I gave Laura the full rundown on Suzanne. Unhinged, irrational, disorganized. Other departments have started to avoid us because of her. Laura listened. I don’t think she was totally surprised, but I also don’t think she understood the extent of Suzanne’s shortcomings. She said she would “give it a think.” The organization is a bit of a mess right now, so I’m not sure if Laura will know what to do with this information, but she seems like she’ll try to do something.
But here’s the realization. I’m done reporting to Suzanne. For me, her latest outburst was the last straw, not the first offense. No matter what course of action upper management proposes, I’m not interested in any type of apology, or meeting of the minds, or negotiated peace. I’ve already been through that with her. I’m too old for this shit. She’s not good for my mental health.
I do love the organization and the job. I’ve been with them 18 years in all – consultant, part-time and now full-time. I’m going to tell Laura I’d love to stay, if I can report to someone else. If Laura can’t make that happen, I’m going to wrap-up my time there. I’m done with Suzanne as a supervisor. I don’t want the job badly enough to deal with her any longer.
We’ll see what happens next week. I think there’s a decent chance they’ll comply with my wishes, but who knows? They’re all new.
Early retirement here I come?
View from in front of our hotel in Grand Canyon Village, June 2023
I am fascinated by all the events portrayed in Episode 8 of Impeachment: American Crime Story.
From Hillary’s “Stand by Your Man” interview following Gennifer Flowers’ press conference, to poor Monica Lewinsky’s merciless questioning by Ken Starr’s team of horndogs, to a super awkward dinner at Vernon Jordan’s house on Martha’s Vineyard, this episode covers a LOT. So many moments where you can only imagine what was actually said in private. Oh, to be a fly on the wall.
Edie Falco as Hillary “takes off her Bill-size blinders and confronts the brutally unfair situation in which she finds herself: The public face of her husband’s lies. When she finally lets rip, it’s clear why the role needs Falco. “You are chaos. You are mayhem,” she screams as she pegs him with a bouquet of fresh flowers. “You lit our life on fire,” she adds tearily. How do you play an outrageously angry and resentful woman who already knows that she won’t leave? That she can’t? Falco injects pathos into a decision popularly regarded as calculating.Vulture
I do love a power couple! So many consequences flow from their actions and emotions. (I think Al Gore might’ve won the 2000 election, if it wasn’t for this mess.)
Catherine the Great & Potemkin, Queen Victoria & Prince Albert, Eleanor & FDR are other power couples I’ve enjoyed thinking about. And I love TV shows about them.
Edie Falco and Clive Owen as Bill and Hillary Clinton in Impeachment: American Crime Story.
What’s something you believe everyone should know.
This pertains to Americans only.
I really think every adult, 18 and over, should be able to name both of their US senators, their governor, and their representative in the House.
It scares me that so many people don’t know really basic stuff. I feel like 2024 is a year that everyone actually needs to pay attention. Depending on what happens in these upcoming elections, things could take a terrible turn, from which I don’t think we’ll recover in my lifetime.
I guess it would be just too much to expect people to be able to name the Speaker of the House, in addition to the President and the Vice President (which most people know). I mean, he’s only second in the presidential line of succession, after the vice president.
This guy, who wants to ban all abortions without exception — to the point of criminalization with prison sentences — is Speaker of the House.
Most people can name these two. Her first name is pronounced: COMMA-LA. Not that hard!
As kids, my neighborhood friends and I would play elaborate games of pretend. One game was “Little House on the Prairie,” based on the books by Laura Ingalls Wilder. We would turn my friend Carolyn’s bed into a pioneer wagon and pretend we were heading west. Calamities would befall us, especially stagecoach robbers. We were always getting attacked.
Here’s a Halloween photo from that time period that I happened to pull out yesterday. I was a cowboy that year. Thinking back, that would certainly fit with my “Little House on the Prairie” obsession.
Halloween, 1973
The magic of books that transported you to a world that you wanted to recreate and inhabit is something that “kid at heart” conjures.
“Little Women” is another book that we liked to act out. We would pretend we were playwrights and write & perform mini-plays.
I remember being so excited when my son built himself a tree perch in which to read “The Swiss Family Robinson.” I knew he was feeling that book magic.
My son reading “The Swiss Family Robinson” in a tree, with the remnants of a brilliant sunset in the background, November 2010
You have three magic genie wishes, what are you asking for?
Genie wishes have a way of backfiring in books and movies. We all know that wishing for someone to fall in love with you or wishing for “more wishes” never pans out.
So, in an attempt to be sure my wishes get granted, with no unintended consequences, I’d be very specific. World peace, reversing climate change, and ending racism would be great, but I feel like they might be too broad for genie wishes.
I think I’d go with cures for three specific, devastating diseases. Sure, maybe some scientists would lose their jobs or need to find a new line of research, but wouldn’t it be awesome if nobody ever died from ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease), breast cancer, or glioblastoma (brain cancer)? I’d cure those three diseases, in memory of friends and family lost to them:
Carla, my best friend from college, and Ben from church (Glioblastoma)
Duilia, my mother-in-law, and Carolyn, my second mom growing up (ALS)
Betsy, my aunt (Breast cancer)
My lovely and kind Aunt Betsy (far left) holding her oldest child—my cousin Steven. She died less than five years later.
My two grandmothers were very different, but had some things in common. In addition to sharing two granddaughters (my sister and me), they were both widows for decades. Both my grandfathers died before I was born. My mother’s mother (Nana) lost her husband in her fifties and my father’s mother (Grammy) lost her husband in her late thirties. Neither one ever remarried, or even had a boyfriend, as far as I know.
They both helped raise some of their grandchildren. My uncle on my mother’s side lost his wife to breast cancer when his kids were very young. Nana eventually moved into the upstairs of their double-decker and helped raise my three cousins. Grammy moved out west to help one of my aunts with her six children after her first husband left (or was kicked out). When that aunt remarried and was back on her feet, Grammy moved in with another aunt back east and helped raise her three sons, while my aunt and uncle worked day and night in their grocery store.
The only grandkids that they didn’t help raise were me and my sister. They were just regular grandmothers to us, although Nana could be pretty strict. She was a kindergarten teacher, so she was always making us read. She was thin and artistic. She smoked. She painted. She had parakeets (Paddy and Billy) that she would let fly around her art studio and they would nibble at the wallpaper. She had beautiful lilacs in her yard in Worcester and an attic full of fashionable vintage dresses. She had a Brooklyn accent. She was cool.
Grammy was more Old World. She wore her hair in long braids twisted around her head and held in place with combs. She was a great cook. She made ravioli and other pasta and tomato sauce (“gravy”) from scratch and could fry things — like chicken, zucchini and French toast — so fluffily that they would melt in your mouth. She tended to wait on us and spoil us, whereas Nana would have us up and vacuuming, if we were sitting around too long.
Grammy could talk and talk forever, telling us stories about our cousins out west, whom we’d never met. She had a tendency to mix-up names. She’d sometimes cycle through one or two of my cousins’ names, before landing on mine.
Both were Catholic, but Grammy was a Democrat and Nana was more conservative, politically speaking. I think my parents were somewhat concerned about having them in the same room when Nixon resigned on TV (August 8, 1974). They were both at our house that night because it was my father’s 40th birthday.
I loved them both very much and I know they loved me too. They made me feel special. I was lucky to have them in my life for as long as I did.
My grandmothers and me at my high school graduation Grammy and meMy fashionable Nana in NYC with “Bobby”