Showing posts with label job disatisfaction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label job disatisfaction. Show all posts

28.3.12

FISH III: I am an avatar

This continues the story about a young man called 'Fish'. In 2011 he quit his job because he hated it so much and ventured forth into foreign lands to seek enlightenment and a lifestyle where he could retire at the age of 26 (see A Short Story, A Parable, A Tale of a Man Who Hates His Job)  only to find himself lonely and isolated and questioning what exactly he was doing with his life (Sink or Swim). Now, March 2012 the story continues...

FISH RETURNS TO THE CITY and is invited and obliged to tag along to various dinner parties with young adults his age. He doesn't really know any of them, at least he didn't really before and given the setting doubted he ever would. But his friends - the one's that he did know - thought they owed it to him to invite him to such places. He had gone for years without "regular civilized social interaction" and they thought a decent amount of reintroduction was necessary.
So he sat and ate his meal carefully with the cutlery, smiled and laughed when prompted, like all the others when they laughed - such wonderful and exaggerated laughs!
Everything with an exclamation mark!
The conversation so witty!
Sighs so poignant!
Jobs so interesting!
Holidays so brilliant!
The drama!
Excitement!
Excitement!!!!!!!!

He didn't feel at ease in such settings and wondered if anyone else at the table actually did. Amidst the conversation he scanned his eyes around the room at all the knick knacks and posters and paintings and statues and empty bottles of alcohol that should have been put in the recycling months ago but seem to like being left out on display.

"Why?" fish asks himself. 


He finds himself at various friend's homes in the days that ensue. They have not seen him for so long and long for his company but soon he is sat down on their couch and a downloaded cartoon episode of the Last Airbender or something along those lines is put on. He watches as the Avatar who is specially skilled bends and manipulates water, fire, earth and air. She moves to the city where she wants to extend her skill and training but there is a protest in the streets and they chant desires to rid the city of Airbenders because they are detrimental to society and cannot be trusted.

Fish does not care for the show but his friends are enthralled. He looks out the window and thinks of suggesting doing something outside later otherwise he knows that another one of these shows will be put on after this one has finished. These were his geeky friends. This is what they always did. Bored, he googles the meaning of avatar. One of the meanings interests him;

2.
an embodiment or personification, as of a principle, attitude, or view of life.
  


The next day it is sunny and he rides a bus through town. On the bus half of the passengers sit staring into their cell phones and three quarters are plugged into iPods. Outside Fish notices that there is a coffee shop almost every four shops and they are all full with people sitting in front of them sipping their medicated beverages. He refuses to be like them. Reliant. Not in control. Suckered into and addicted to an expensive and unnecessary social norm.


The night before a news broadcast had stated that there were plans to send people to Mars because life is habitable there. There were already people in training for the harsh living conditions but they were excited that the place was 'liveable'.

Why send people to Mars when you can live somewhere like Arizona? is all he had thought about since hearing such news.


He wants to take all his clothes off in the bus.

It's the answer, he thinks.

No pretense. No hiding. The truth will set you free as long as you are willing to look at it. Everyone needs to do it.

But he reaches his bus stop and walks down the street and down a small garden path to his friends door and as he presses the buzzer he gets the feeling that he is an avatar. 



He just needs to harness his skills.

He hears rushing footsteps growing louder and the door swings open and his friend, all dressed up, envelops him in a huge excitable hug.

'It's so nice out' she says. 'Let's go get a coffee!'



24.10.11

Silence is the fuel for music

In the lead up to the NaNoWriMo challenge - National Novel Writer's Month where entrants aim to write a 50,000 word novel in the 30 days of November, I thought I'd post a short story I wrote two years ago On Living Without A Television. I was in a similar space, starting out in a new city in a foreign country, with minimal possessions and a new job. Last time I was in Oxford, UK as a physiotherapist. This time it's Vancouver, Canada as a worker in an Australian bar.
It's a story that is dear to me and came out effortlessly in one night. I'm hoping a similar thing will happen this time around except in longer format in a slightly longer timeframe. Writing a novel in a month is a big ask but I'm going to throw my hands on the keys and see what happens. This is my pledge to myself. Wish me luck and encouragement.
The novel will be called Affinity. It will be a work of science fiction, like the series of blogs I started of the same name and purposely did not finish for the sake of this longer format.




This is the short story, my first, from a tiny cubicle of a room in hospital accommodation apartments attached to the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford. May next month's novel be even greater.

ON LIVING WITHOUT A TELEVISION
The boy is experimenting with living without a television.
The boy is not actually a boy, but rather a 25 year old young man. He still feels like a boy however for the following reasons;
1) At work people ask him how old he is, and ask when he finishes his training. (The boy finished training a long time ago).
2) His facial hair growth is at a rate where he can get away with shaving every fifth day.
The above reasons are rather immaterial to the story however it can be noted that these annoy the boy and have done for many years.
The boy has found himself on the opposite side of the world, in a cubicle of a room, about 2 meters by 2.5 meters at best, and it is reminding him of his university days when he resided in a hostel, but with noticeable differences.
First of all, there is no vomit. Secondly, there is no sex audibly jumping through the wall and into the boy’s head, not yet anyway, and lastly, there is no one round house kicking his wardrobe in the adjacent room.
The room is rather bare. In the corner, next to the door, there is an empty wardrobe, inside of which nothing is hanging. Adjacent to the door there are some small drawers, also empty, and across from this, a single mattress on a single bare bed frame, the type that is cheap to buy, has springs and wire meshing, and is assembled in ten minutes. On the bed there are no sheets, no pillow, and no duvet.
The room feels anaesthetized.
The only possessions that the boy has brought into the room lie in his backpack which leans against the small bedside table cum cupboard. There is no T.V.
Upon arrival, one of the other residents told the boy that there was an unused television in the storage cupboard at the end of the hall and that he was welcome to it. The boy closed his eyes, placed his hand over his closed lips, then shook his head in dismissive fashion. It was a very monk-like response in a sacrifice to a desire. He looked like the ‘speak no evil’ monkey.
“No really.” The resident said. “You don’t have to be polite. No body uses it. Take it.” “I’m experimenting with living without a T.V” the boy said.
The resident scratched his head and went back to his room.
Tomorrow is the boy’s first day at work. He lays his sleeping bag out on his bed and rolls up his jumper to use as a pillow. He has done this work before. He hated it. He felt it slowly suck his soul into a vacuum. He wished he knew where that vacuum was so he could go about retrieving it. Could it be retrieved? He wished he knew more about the properties of vacuums.
But that was before, thinks the boy. That was before the revelation that life should be lived without a T.V. He hopes that things will be different now. That his calculations have been accurate. Before he believed that it was the work that was making him depressed, but now he believes that it might not have been the work, but interpreted as such because of all the lies and false ideologies that were fed to him through the T.V.
Everything is clear now, thinks the boy. Everything will be okay. I have detoxified from all the rot that box has caused. I am now in touch with reality.
He goes to sleep knowing these things.
The boy is at hospital. He is at work watching an old man in an untied hospital gown kiss the wall. He strokes it gently with his hands. He is in total bliss and adoration for the wall and his ass is fully showing.
It doesn’t surprise the boy. Things like this happen from time to time.
The boy has been going through his list, seeing the patients he needs to see, and casually striking a line through them. The boy has great satisfaction in doing this. The striking the line part, that is.
The old man is not in bliss with the wall anymore. He is agitated, angry.
“Talk to me!” he is yelling.
“Talk to me!”
A nurse attends, ties the string up at the back of the old man’s hospital gown, and tries to persuade the man to go back to his bed.
The old man pays no attention to the nurse. He fends her off with one hand indicating that she should not interrupt. He is making it clear: This is between him and the wall.
“Talk to me!”
His pleads are honest, desperate.
“Talk. To. Me.
Talk! To! Me!
Talk to me!!
Why won’t you talk to me?!”
The boy is reading his next patient’s notes. She is a failed suicide attempt. She had tried to take her life by overdosing with pills, now she is brain damaged and cannot move her body or communicate.
He can hear her coughing from behind the curtain. It is not like a normal cough. She has a tracheostomy so suction tubes can be stuck down her airways to clear secretions when required. It is like a plastic box with a cap on it. The cap is currently closed. Her coughs are like a vacuum cleaner sneezing.
The boy’s reading is interrupted.
“Are you the new trainee student?” one of the ward clerks asks.
She has already looked at the badge which the boy is wearing which says otherwise, but then looked back at the boy, took note of how definitively youthful he appeared to be, and asked the question anyway.
“No” says the boy.
She looks confused, like her personal belief system has just fallen apart. “How old are-”
The boy leaves and enters to see the patient through the curtain.
The patient is lying in bed, her eyes gaze at the ceiling but do not focus on a particular spot. They sometimes gaze around the room, but not at anyone. It’s like they gazed at you but avoided you at the same time.
The boy thinks about what he should do with this patient. She cannot talk. She never will. She cannot move. She wanted to die and now everyone is keeping her alive. The irony. She is a joke, screaming at the face of modern medicine. They want her eventually in a specialized wheelchair, totally dependent, incapable of intelligent thought, but still breathing. “Alive”. That’s what medicine does. It keeps people “alive”.
The boy is trying to get himself in front of the woman’s gaze. He believes he can stare at her, and her at him, and they will be able to communicate telepathically. He wants to recognize that somewhere, somewhere in there, the woman still exists. He wants to pray for the woman, believing, trusting, that if her eyes remain in contact with his and his with hers, he can speak on her behalf, ask for a miracle to happen, that her health and life be restored if she wished to live, as she did before, that she was sorry, and ever grateful for the second chance. Or, on the contrary, to die, to not muck around, to call it quits and exit this place, because what is happening now is a mockery. It is injustice. It is salt in a devastating wound.
“Fuck you all. See this? This is my middle finger and it is raised. It is raised for you.”
The woman should be allowed to say these things, and leave having said them, but this. Not this.
This is all the boy can think of doing. He does not much care about the medical plan.
Back in the hall, a second nurse is trying to convince the old man to bid his adieus to the wall. The wall has still not conversed with him and he is devastated.
“Talk to me!” the man yells, but this time to one of the nurses. He seems to have given up on the wall.
“I am talking to you” she says calmly and sympathetically. The words hug him like a giant soft teddy bear.
“Where am I?!!!” yells the man.
“You are in hospital. Come on, let’s go back to your bed.” The old man scans his eyes around the place.
The boy does the same. He sees old people slumped in bed, trying to move up the bed, get comfortable, but the beds are too soft, and they are too weak, incapable. It is futile trying to move in those beds. He sees colliding zimmer frames, people wheeled on commodes, saliva seeping from the corners of mouths, vacant stares out windows. Televisions, apparently just on for the sound.
But the boy wants to see what the old man sees.
He wants to feel what he feels.
He wants to think what he thinks.
“Hospital?!!” he yells, his feet slowly shuffling as he is led back to his bed.
“I don’t want to be in hospital...” He no longer yells, his tone one of realization, his voice as if straight from his head, unfiltered, honest.
The boy is back in his 2 meter by 2.5 meter cubicle of a room. He nods his head in agreement with his thinking. He is thinking about the day, how it went, the ups and downs, and is okay with it.
He is sitting on the side of his bed and can feel the springs. If he shuffles his weight from one side to the other, he can feel the springs bending, stretching, reacting, adapting. He can see what they look like without actually having seen them before.
The boy feels no rush to do anything. He takes his time and is deliberate about doing so. He decides to do press ups. He does this on the floor space beside the bed with his feet elevated on the chair which he moves. Whilst doing this he takes note that, potentially, he could also in future do them across the width of the room between the end of the bed and the closet and across to the drawers.
There are two positional possibilities for push ups in this room.
The boy lies on his bed and stares at the ceiling, then at the walls that surround, then at the ground. He knows that at times it may be difficult to live without a T.V. but that is just weakness and he must persevere through it. He sees some scrap paper, three pieces, lying on the floor. A smile comes across his face as he reaches for the paper and inspiration motivates him to sit up. He begins to fold the paper into paper planes. Three of them. Each one different.
The boy wonders how many other 25 year old men are folding paper planes for pleasure worldwide at that particular moment: Not enough.
The first plane is a short one with wide wings. It is nose heavy and nosedives into the floor immediately after release.
It disappoints the boy.
The second and third planes are the same design, long, sleek, but the second has embellishments on the wings and the third has been kept basic and simple.
The boy releases the second plane. It is the one with the extra folds. The deluxe wings, special features, some would say unnecessary but visually appealing. It flies fine, but the whole time it spirals. It heads in one direction but it is also out of control. There is no way the passengers on that plane would know where they were going thought the boy. This thought frightens him and the plane crashes to the floor before it hits the wall.
The boy holds the last plane in his hand and looks at it. It doesn’t have much riding on it after watching the previous two planes. There is not much expectation. The boy is questioning his paper plane making skills.
The boy releases the last plane. It glides through the air. It is effortless. Beautiful! As he watches it, even for its short flight time, he can imagine what it would be like to be the paper on one of those wings. Slicing the air, feeling it separate and pass over its top and bottom. He is in the wing. He is in the molecules! The boy wants everyone to experience what he is experiencing now. To be present, in awe, aware of the wonders and beauty of the small things in life. He wants to go back into the hospital, walk up to that old man, pull this paper plane out from behind his back, hold it in front of his face until he is transfixed by it and throw it. The old man would see. The old man would know.
He wants the lady with the tracheostomy to have known the beauty of a paper plane in flight as he does now. The boy is convinced that if she did know, if she really did know, there would have been no way she would have taken those drugs.
You see. It’s a simple thing. You must pay attention. You must be present and aware of what is happening. The plane is soaring. Gravity is its nemesis but air is its friend. The plane is conquering, winning, until it hits the wall and flight time is over. It makes you wish you had a bigger room. It makes you wish you were outside.
You don’t need a T.V. You really don’t.

21.1.11

A Short Story, A Parable, A Tale of a Man Who Hates His Job

Meet Fish.



Fish works in a pencil sharpening factory. It’s a small factory and his job is to sharpen pencils, by hand. When Fish started work at the Factory he wondered why machines didn’t do the work for him. 
“We can’t afford that sort of Technology” said his line manager. “We are a small Factory.”
Fair enough thought Fish. 
When Fish started his job he was young and stupid. He was laughing that someone would pay him money for doing such a mundane and brainless task. At the end of his first day he was bragging to all of his friends. The money that he would receive! The simplicity!
But that was five years ago.
In the last two years Fish has only worked eight months. He can no longer stand the sight of pencils. He has also come to hate written language and art necessitated by pencils. Grudgingly, his employer let him take time off because if he didn’t he would lose him for good. Fish had become the most senior pencil sharpener in the factory and was so fast that he sharpened pencils three times faster than his peers.
Initially Fish experimented with time off, not really knowing what to do with himself he slept in, ate breakfast at lunch, and lunch at dinner. He had plans to hang out with friends but they were all working during the day. Fish was alone.
Not working, Fish learnt that he still had to meet the costs of everyday living. He still had to pay his rent, the power and telephone bill, food, the list went on. Fish’s employer had only granted him unpaid leave.
Everything is so expensive Fish thought. I can’t go on like this.
So Fish decided to cut down on his spending. He started to realize that if he spent less money, he would not need to work as much. He started to loathe his apartment, his cell phone, his eating habits. They were all sending him to work! His lifestyle made him work!
So Fish left his apartment and stopped buying meat. He lived in his car and only bought vegetables and fruit that were in season. He bathed in streams, cooked with a portable gas stove and started to develop a passion for rice.
Fish calculated that if he lived like this, he would not need to go back to work for another 3.24 years.
Three months pass.
Fish’s hair is long and he has a beard. He wears recycled clothing and looks derelict and disheveled, wild, but surprisingly indie. He is sick of living in a car. When he meets girls and takes them back to his place they would leave disgusted before even inside.
“This is your house?!” they would say.
“Yeah” said Fish.
“That’s disgusting! You’re a freak!”
Fish craved luxury again but still he detested work. His friends and parents gave him pep talks. They tried to tell him that his job wasn’t that bad and that he was actually making positive difference in the world.
“Everyone needs sharp pencils” they said.
“There’s no point” replied Fish. “They’re just going to get blunt again.”
Fish applied for other jobs but no one wanted an experienced pencil sharpener regardless of his Bruce Lee-esque hand speed. They were mundane jobs anyway, thought Fish, demoralized. He started to wonder how he could live in luxury on his savings without spending more week to week. He wondered if it was possible to retire at age 26.
So Fish travelled to Asia.
Then India.
Then Africa.
He lived on islands.
In jungles.
Amongst Himalayan Yaks.
He kept traveling in search of the most cheap and sustainable living arrangement. Once found, Fish would never have to work again.
Eventually he found himself in a Kenyan village opposite a refugee camp. He shared a mud hut with a family of eight who affectionately termed him “Mizungu”. 
Each morning Fish would sit on the mound of dirt sipping tea strained through Zebra hide. He would watch the people in the refugee camp go about their daily business, lining up for food rations, children going to school, playing football, healthcare. It had everything! He did some investigation regarding the cost of living in a refugee camp.
He worked out that if he lived in the refugee camp he would not have to work for another 112.81 years.
Another three months pass and Fish has managed to starve himself to a suitable level granting him access to the refugee camp. He lives contentedly inside and considers the lifestyle and company new and exotic. The only thing he didn’t understand was all the complaining that went on inside. Everyone wanted jobs, big screen T.Vs, they wanted to leave the camp, travel overseas, to lands of ‘opportunity’, lands of the ‘free’.
Fish shakes his head. These people didn’t realize that they were living the dream. They didn’t know what it was like to work in a Pencil Factory.
And so Fish lives in the refugee camp. He watches people come and go. He sees the new tents get put up. His friends and family would write to him and plead him to come back but Fish wouldn’t want any part of it. Everything about home was expensive, and where there was expense there was need of sharpening pencils on his behalf, or some other equally monotonous and meaningless task. They had all become the same in his eyes and he detested them all. He had found a new home now. Life in the refugee camp was meagre but he was at his own liberty. He accepts it and embraces it.
One day a group of UN workers come with gifts for refugees in the camp and everyone lines up in excitement, Fish included. When Fish reaches the front of the line he is given the same gift as everyone else. It is a pencil and the lead is broken.
The children in the refugee camp are ecstatic. They run to walls of buildings making effort to inscribe but nothing happens. Adults try and do the same. Everyone has broken pencils, they all try to use them, none of them working, then turn to Fish - the only white man in the camp - for answers.
“Mizungu! Why dis not work?”
“It’s because it needs...” Fish does not complete the sentence.
He watches boys press with their pencils so hard on the walls that the paint from the pencil exterior starts to come off and stick to the wall.
“It working now!” they exclaim.
The remainder of the camp is dubious. They look at their broken questions and question their worth. Once again they have been given unwanted and technologically defunct gifts from the West in the form of aid. They wanted pens.
Fish goes back to his tent and gathers his things. He decides he must leave. He will head south to Uganda.