Morning Music….
The Seismics – Next Wave
I’ll probably teach another couple of years to qualify for my pension, but I find myself thinking more and more about what’s next.
For years, I’ve said that if I work in retirement, I want to work somewhere people want to be. Not someplace where everyone is counting the minutes until they can leave. A ski resort. A swimming pool. A health club. Somewhere associated with enjoyment.
A recent possibility occurred to me after my wife and I took a cooking class. I can’t teach a cooking class. At least not unless the class is “How to Burn Toast and Misread Recipes.” But I could absolutely be one of the helpers.
At our recent class, two younger employees were assisting the instructor. One spent most of the time washing dishes and cleaning equipment. The other did prep work, set out ingredients for each station, and generally made sure everything was where it needed to be before the students arrived.
And I found myself thinking, “I’d enjoy doing that.” In fact, during a break in class, I actually asked if they wanted help cleaning up.
I think I’d like it, not because it pays well. It doesn’t. Not because it would advance my career. At sixty years old, I’m probably done worrying about career advancement.
I think I’d enjoy it simply because I’d enjoy doing it well.
I was a short-order cook all through college and spent my senior year of high school working as a prep cook at a chain restaurant. At the time, I’m sure I complained about the job. Most teenagers complain about their jobs. Looking back, though, there was something satisfying about it.
The actual food prep wasn’t always exciting. There was an endless supply of tuna salad to make and popcorn shrimp to prep. Not exactly culinary artistry. But I worked with a great older coworker. Older, of course, meant nineteen or twenty. We’d listen to WXRT while working in the prep area and just get the job done.
What appeals to me now isn’t even the cooking.
It’s the preparation.
The mise en place.
The organization.
The cleaning.
I’d enjoy making sure every baking sheet was spotless. Every knife returned to the proper place. Every station stocked perfectly. I’d take pride in making sure each table had exactly the ingredients they needed so they could have a great experience.
There’s something almost zen about that.
Maybe that’s one of the advantages of getting older. When you’re young, every job has to be leading somewhere. You need advancement, status, money, a better title, a bigger future. Or it’s time-filler/money while you wait to do the real thing.
Now I find myself attracted to jobs that are worthwhile for their own sake.
No ladder to climb.
No promotion to chase.
Just showing up, doing useful work, helping people have a good experience, and going home satisfied.
Maybe I’ll look into it when we get back from our three weeks in Utah.
Of course, there is one potential problem. The cooking school is attached to a kitchen store. If employees get a discount, there’s a very real possibility that my entire paycheck would immediately be spent on cast iron pans, bread knives, Dutch ovens, proofing baskets, and kitchen gadgets I absolutely do not need.
Retirement may not be as financially secure as I’ve been led to believe.
As usual, I was wrong again.
I was wrong when my wife wanted to redecorate our older son’s room. To be fair, some of my objections were sustained, so I’d like partial credit for helping make it a great remodel.
I was wrong about spending the money to redo our backyard.
I was wrong about finishing the basement.
However, I was NOT wrong about the Little Free Puzzle Library she wanted installed in our front yard.
You’ve seen Little Free Libraries. Take a book, leave a book. I love them. If I buy a physical copy of a book, as soon as I’m done reading it, I walk down the block and put it in one.
But a puzzle library?
Same concept, except with jigsaw puzzles.
Nevertheless, she wanted one for Christmas, so I bought it. We had it installed about a month ago.
Now, I am going to maintain my position that I am not wrong, but I may be the only person in the neighborhood who thinks that.
The thing has been a huge hit.
My wife loves looking out the window and watching adults and kids stop to browse through the puzzles. It took a week or two for word to spread, but now there are always a few puzzles in there and they rotate regularly.
The final blow came while we were setting up for our block party.
A woman stopped her car in the middle of the street, which irritated me because we were trying to clear the street for the event. But she jumped out and opened her trunk.
It was full of puzzles.
She was genuinely excited that there was a puzzle library in the neighborhood and wanted to contribute.
So yes, technically, I still maintain that a Little Free Puzzle Library is a ridiculous idea.
Unfortunately, everyone else appears to love it.
Including me. (it’s a nice neighborly thing)
That was a nice Father’s Day.
For whatever reason, the last few Father’s Days I’ve been traveling to Utah. I think it’s just been timing. School gets out, a week or two passes, and I’m on the road. Usually, I leave on Saturday and wind up missing Father’s Day entirely. This year was different. Because of a family trip later in the summer, I’m heading west at a different time. Going forward, I think I might stick around more often.
First off, I slept in. Not late. I’m old.
Still, it was nice to sleep in and not have to worry about training. No alarm. No long run. No bike ride hanging over my head.
After coffee and the crossword, my wife and I went to a yoga class at our gym. I possess neither strength nor flexibility, which is exactly why I’ve decided I need to add yoga and/or strength training to my routine. For me, though, it was also another hour I got to spend with my wife. I know. I’m a simp.
We did a chore or two on the way home and then had a nice family brunch with everyone. After that, my wife, the boys and I played Scattergories. I don’t know if there is any scientific evidence that Scattergories improves family relationships, but there should be.
Later, my wife and I went to a cooking class. The topic was smashburgers, but it was really about a lot more than that: grinding meat, making buns, pickles, aioli, and a wedge salad. It was a very nice afternoon and, once again, a few more hours spent with my wife.
When we got home, we watched a harmless rom-com before bed.
Honestly, hanging out with my wife and kids was all I wanted anyway. That’s usually the answer if you ask me what I want.
That said, I also got some great gifts.
A gift card to a new deli in town. Bags and bags of Jujy Fruits and Jelly Beans. My family knows me well.
But the standout was something my daughter made. She created a large framed collage of my life. Apparently, she raided “the box” in the basement, that mysterious storage container where important things go to be forgotten for twenty years.
The collage included my high school suspension letter, my college ID, military dog tags and awards, paperwork from my appointment as a prosecutor, letters from former students, and photographs spanning decades all the way to the present day.
It was spectacular.
Not that I didn’t also appreciate the future pastrami on rye.
What struck me most was seeing all those pieces of my life together in one place. Most of us don’t spend much time looking backward. We just move on to the next thing. The next job. The next project. The next worry. My daughter took all those scattered pieces and turned them into a story.
Maybe that’s one of the gifts children give their parents as they get older. They remind us that our lives look different from the outside than they do from the inside.
From the inside, I mostly remember mistakes, wrong turns, and things I should have done better. From the outside, she saw a life worth celebrating.
All in all, it was a great day.
Today’s Harvard Classic reading was Grimm’s Tales – Cinderella.
Wow, is it different than the story I knew (I think most of the tales are)?
First, she’s called Cinderalla because the step-sisters make her sleep in the ashes by the fire and was always dusty and dirty.
Second, there is no fairy godmother
Third, the shoes DO fit the step-sisters because one step-sister cuts off her big toe and the other cuts off part of her heel, so they’ll fit.
Fourth, birds peck out both sisters’ eyes, so they are blind at the end for being wicked and telling falsehoods.