Running one evening Nik found himself rather overwhelmed by his utter inability to secure a job. This was an island full of pot smoking hippie surfers, for god’s sake, and he was a 30-something resourceful man with a Masters. How was this happening?
Yes, it was true his heart was elsewhere and that was it’s own problem. But come on he just wanted a decent job to pay some bills. It really shouldn’t be that hard.
Nik stopped at his favorite meditative spot overlooking the Pacific. There playing amongst the amazing plant life was a family of mongoose. He watched how one clearly wanted to be left alone as two others leapt and wrestled him to the ground.
The Mongoose had been brought to Hawai’i to help rid the island of its rat crisis. The problem that no one seemed to address was that mongooses are day feeders and rats, nocturnal. So, before anyone knew it the island was overrun with rats and mongooses. Oops.
How carefree they were. Somehow they managed to wile away the hours cavorting and canoodling and yet were able to manage to still eat and sleep. And these bastards didn’t have a job.
Nik met Jessica at the office of Aloha Medical. The office looked like the company had been found out by the Fraud Division of the FBI and they were trying to make a run for it. Boxes and boxes were randomly strewn besides unplugged and half-cannibalized Xerox machines. There seemed to be tremendous confusion about the office juxtaposed with an eerie sense of ease with its workers. That is, except Jackie.
Jackie was nervous.
“You know,” she stammered, “I only briefly looked over your resume when I told the agency to send you in. But yesterday I looked it over more carefully.” Jackie examined Nik closely. He made the point of dressing up in order to make a good first impression.
“You’re wearing a tie.”
“Yes.”
“We’re more casual than that.” Nik had recently attended a job fair that was supposed to be “casual” as was told he was underdressed and not welcome. Now he was overdressed. Perhaps Roommate Rick was on to something with the whole nudist thing. If we were all naked all the time we could never be criticized for our clothing choice.
“So,” she continued, “You were an Executive Assistant? In New York City? For six years?”
“Thereabouts. Yes.” Smile #15.
“Uh huh. It’s just…well, you know this is just an admin support job. Um, filing and such. I’m just worried…I don’t know how challenging this will be for you.” Was she actually talking him out of the job? And was it working?
Nik needed a job. He needed money, any money, to coming in instead of hemorrhaging as it had been. So, he took the position.
“He was an Executive Assistant and now he’s doing admin support?” boomed an employee from around the corner. Apparently, Jackie had sent out a floor-wide email announcing Nik’s arrival.
“Shhh,” echoed another, “he’s right around the corner.”
“I’m just saying, why would he want to do this?”
Why indeed? Already Nik was having doubts and making discoveries about himself. He had told himself that it didn’t matter what he did for money. A job was a job. He knew if he moved to Hawai’i that he would have to make sacrifices, take a job that he didn’t necessarily enjoy for a lot less money than he was used to.
But Nik was a scientist, a journalist, and a fool.
As a small child, Nik’s mother told him that the stove was hot. Hm, he wondered, what does that mean? Hot?
‘Ah?!” he shivered in pain as he laid his bare hand on the red irons, “yeah, that’s, uh, that’s hot.”
“Everyone told you that’s what you’d find in Hawai’i,” Tom reminded him. “Why didn’t you listen?”
Furthermore, the job Nik had been offered would be even less that the low rate he had been quoted. He was now sacrificing the sacrifice. Hawai’i would have to prove itself self-sustaining or it would have to be sacrificed.
The other problem was that Nik realized that there were definitive parameters to what he would accept, yes, life was a compromise but one had to draw a line in the sand. It was clearly not enough to live in paradise and just “do something.” And yes, he wished he could have foreseen this. But that just wasn’t who Nik was.
Would his friends think him a fool if he left? If he stayed? Maybe they thought he was a fool already.
Let it go, he reminded himself. Just let go.
So, after two days of mind-numbing work, he told Jackie that he would be quitting. The look of utter despair that washed over her face nearly broke Nik’s heart. It was part “why can’t I keep anyone around” and part “dear god, take me with you.”
If there was a hell Nik was sure that it was the administrative end of the healthcare industry. Redundancy and bureaucracy had turned ordinary, decent human beings into mindless automatons. And those machines were cracking under the pressure of having no real pressure. It wasn’t ease that Nik had noticed that first day. It was soullessness. He was somewhat disturbed by the similarities between the two.
Boxes and files were mislabeled or just plain lost. And what could be found was buried under a mountain of “compliance.”
The employees of Aloha Medical stared blankly at their computer screens hoping the surge of electricity would arc forth and end their misery. The dark office had the stench of death all around it. Nik was certain he had actually met Death in the break room having a cup of decaf.
“Someone die,’ Nik asked.
“Nope.”
“…Just…hangin’ out then?
“Yup.”
“Is someone sick?”
“Oh, it’s not their bodies. They’re fine. It’s a healthcare office, after all. No, it’s their souls, their will to live. D’you see Bill in Ops? Ooh ah, that bastard’s gonna kick it before lunch.”
True enough, Bill was the saddest creature Nik had ever seen. Profoundly overweight and so pale he was nearly grey, Bill spoke in the fragile tones of someone at the funeral of a person they barely knew.
But then there was Jeremy. Jeremy was a floppy-haired surfer boy in his late 20s. He worked IT for the office. Cocky without really knowing it, Jeremy was likely to pull office pranks on Death just for a laugh.
“PPPPLewgh!”
“Ah, come off it, Jeremy,” Death would say as he sat on the woopy cushion, “Grow up.”
Nik had dubbed Jeremy his official office crush. These were bys that Nik wasn’t necessarily interested in having sex with (besides they were most often straight), but rather a point of focus to pass the endless hours.
Jeremy was adorable and smelled like a mix between musk and citrus, like oranges in a locker room. He found reasons to linger around Nik for longer than Nik was comfortable with. Cut boys frequently made Nik anxious. Either Jeremy knew this and enjoyed it or was blissfully unaware of his own physical proximity. In either case, it made Nik Shiver like a nervous poodle. Jeremy would lean in close to set up Nik’s second workstation (why Nik needed two workstations was unclear but Nik wasn’t complaining).
“So, here’s your [techno-babble],” Jeremy said.
Nik could feel the heat coming off Jeremy and it made his voice crack. “Uh huh, “ squeaked Nik perfectly unaware about what had just been explained to him.
“And, of course, your shortcut to [techno-babble].”
Nik giggled in agreement.
“So, you’re all set. Again.” Jeremy said and laid his hand on Nik’s shoulder.
The harder Nik tried in life to be cool the more ridiculous he appeared. He tried to spin his chair around to face and thank Jeremy but slammed his knee into the desk. Trying to play it off he stood up promptly but having hit a funny bone he trembled and stumbled into Patricia, the dotty Accounts Payable maven.
But thank god for office crushes. They’re perfectly silly, meaningless things and yet as essential as oxygen.
But then there was Bill, who clearly was not getting enough oxygen, figuratively or literally.
“Yeah,” Bill sighed, “Gotta go to Maui tomorrow.” Sigh. “Uh, so I need those…” Something distracted Bill. A thought. He looked longingly out the window. If he jumped would anyone care? “…Uh, those, uh, accreditations. From Julie. Did you get those? The accreditations? From Julie.”
“I’m sorry, Bill, this is only my second day. I don’t know who Julie is or what an accreditation is.” And I really don’t care, Nike thought.
“I can never get Julie’s attention. I just need those damn accreditations, um, before tomorrow, you know?”
If ever there was a case for euthanasia, Bill was it. Nik wanted to say something reassuring like, “Gee, dude, it’s going to be OK.” But Nik wasn’t sure that this was true for Bill.
So the next day, Nik quit. He did, after all, have his coaching job.
Angela raised her hand.
“Yes, Angela?” Nik asked the four-year old.
“Which is better for flying? Um, the green one or the red one?” Given that he had just been trying to explain Essential Actions to children, a conspicuously challenging endeavor, he expected an amount of confusion. But not on his part.
“Um…what?” He asked trying to be supportive.
“If, if, if, um, Mom says that, um, I’ll get lickens if we color on the walls.” Nik thought they had just been talking about flying. Angela was like a tiny nuclear reactor. Particles were smashing and popping inside her tiny core. She could barely control the tremulous energy.
“…Yes, well, perhaps we shouldn’t color on the walls then.” Nik tried to get the conversation back on track. “So, if we want our friends to play with us, but they don’t seem like they want to play, what might we try to do to get them to…” No’uana raised her hand. “Yes, No’uana?”
“Are we doing something after school?”
“Well, I think you’re going with your Mom.”
”Will you help Mommy?”
“Um.”
“What are we gonna do at the store?”
“I don’t…I don’t know, um…” Nik stared back at the group of four little girls. Nik realized that his authority was slowly slipping. For god’s sake, man, these girls could barely feed themselves and they’ve completely usurped your control of this class!
He had to think fast. Suddenly Nik had a flash. Regardless of a person’s age, sex, place on the earth, whether you were fat Bill or a mongoose, we all just want to feel like our needs are being addressed. That we have identified a goal and are active in our lives to achieve it.
“OK, Nu’uana why don’t you ask Angela to, um, go with you to the store with Mom. Now, it’s very important that she go with you. And Angela, you don’t want to go because you’ll get, um…”
“Lickins?”
“Yes, lickins, you’ll get lickins.” Something in Angela’s hyperactive eyes had lit up and her focused narrowed.
“I don’t want lickins,” she said, quite determined. Nik figured for this purpose wanting to avoid something was as clear as wanting to gain something.
For the next hour, the troupe of young girls had straightened up and was now active participating in the active play.
Running back to his meditation spot, Nik once again saw the mongoose family. This time he realized that they weren’t just playing but actively vying for attention or supremacy in the pack. They were working, yes, but it just so happened that their work was play.
This was part of the key, Nik thought. He would be more focused in his goal. He would work to find a way to make his play his work and his work his play.