A
friend of mine sent me a note the other day. We’ve known each other for a
long-time, and like me, she is ‘of a certain age.’
She was
in the process of losing her job. It’s a process when you’re of a certain age,
and a woman, because each of the four holding companies that together control
something on the order of 80% of the advertising jobs in New York, is afraid of—not
gaining a reputation for being ageist—but of being sued for sexism and ageism.
In any
event, this was it for my friend. She and her agency of seven years were
parting ways.
She cried on the phone. And begged for something that would make the pain and humiliation and fear go away.
Here’s
what I wrote her:
“It was
around the Jewish New Year. A beautiful autumn day. I had just run six miles or
seven, like I was doing in those days.
I
finished, exhausted.
I sat
down on the granite steps leading up to the reservoir at 84th
Street.
And I
cried.
I had
just been fired.
For
being insubordinate. (I had grown up in advertising thinking that
insubordination was part of the job.)
I was
39. Had two private school tuitions to pay. And two inquisitive daughters who
would be upset if they knew I was out of work.
I
cried.
I was
scared.
Was I
done?
Would I
ever work again?
What if my booked sucked?
What if
I couldn’t find a job?
I
cried.
Then I
did what I do. I did what you will do.
I
called my friends. I made cold calls. I hustled and hustled some more.
Some
days are dark and you feel like the phone will never again ring.
That
you’re doomed.
You
might find yourself sitting on the steps somewhere and crying.
But you
will find work.
Better,
more satisfying work.
And you
will be better for it.
--
You
have to believe in shit like this.
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