What nobody tells you about Adult Life... (2) - by Stephen Martins
Be as nice to the janitor as you would your boss. When I started my first job, I only took notice of the people I worked with directly. What I didn't realize is I was snubbing everyone else. Unfortunately, when I needed something from one of them, they could be downright mean. In my next job, I decided to go out of my way to be nice to everyone. Unexpectedly, the guys in the stock room were willing to bend rules for me time and again. Those guys saved my ass on many occasions. A little courtesy pays big dividends.
A
professional job isn't one long coffee break. My dad owned his own business and he was successful.
What I saw growing up was him showing up at the office at ten. Taking a coffee
break with a buddy an hour later. Working another hour. Taking a long lunch,
etc. I also had a college professor who came from the professional world that
made it sound like work was conducted around the water cooler in between
fooling around. Boy was I shocked by 50+ weeks with no breaks and eating your
lunch at your desk.
Brains
aren't enough. I was a
bright kid. Adults told me the world was my oyster. I had visions of being
celebrated for my smarts only to get a job...a real job...in the real
world...with a lot of other bright people. All of a sudden, I was average.
Bright was the new average. I wasn't special anymore. There were oyster owners
who were being celebrated not only in their visions, but in everyone else's as
well. They were able to create innovative profitable products for the company
that won awards. They had their names on patents. They published papers. What
were the special attributes they had that allowed them to succeed?
Read the
next three items for some of them.
"In
theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they aren't." --Yogi Berra. I soon learned it wasn't enough
to understand how an audio product worked in theory. I had to design
one...out of real parts...parts that had real world quirks...quirks they didn't
teach you about in school. But wait, there's more! Other people would have to
make hundreds of thousands of copies of my design each year and the vast
majority had to work. Of those that shipped, the vast majority had to keep on
working for several years. "Reality is the murder of a beautiful theory
by a gang of ugly facts." --Robert Glass
You never
stop learning. Did I
mention that real world parts work differently than the ideal parts they teach
you about in school? After being burned a few times, I embarked on a
self-education process that led me to an area of expertise that served me for
years to come. I became Mister Real World Part.
Persistence
is the most important ingredient in success. Thomas Edison wasn't that smart. If he had been, he
wouldn't have fired Nikola Tesla. However, he was persistent. Other than the
fact that he stole his employees ideas, it was persistence that allowed him to
amass 2,332 patents worldwide. After all, he said, "Genius is 1 percent
inspiration 99 perspiration." I'm not sure about the genius part, but
he was persistent.
United we
stand, divided we fall. Two of my early jobs had cut throat cultures. Employees would guard
their knowledge with tighter security than the CIA. Job security they called
it. At a later job an older engineer shared his vast wealth of knowledge with
me. He became my mentor. Fast forward to the next company. This company had a
large turnover of co-workers, so I achieved seniority. Now I could create the
environment I wanted for my department. I implemented a share and teach policy.
There would be no secrets. By teaching each other, we'd all be smarter. New
hires eagerly participated and thrived. It was my favorite job.
You catch
more flies with honey than vinegar. Maybe it was just me. Maybe it was my tyrant of a
dad throwing his weight around at home. Whatever the reason, I imagined that
adults didn't take shit off nobody. I thought I was going to be in control. If
someone tried to fuck me over, they better watch out. It never occured to me
that if every adult acted this way, adult life would be like the wild West. As
a young gun slinger, I soon met my match in a garage repairing my car after a
wreck. Every time, something went wrong, I read them the riot act. It never
occurred to me that all these things went wrong on purpose. It was payback for
the riot act. My dad's friend intervened on my behalf, so I eventually got my
car back. He told me,"You catch more flies with honey than vinegar."
I started taking his advice and now only a couple of things go wrong when I
take my car to the garage.
If you
have enough money, you don't have time and if you have enough time, you don't
have the money. When I
worked, I had plenty of money, but little time to spend it. My hobbies
suffered. Now that I have taken time off, I have time for my hobbies, but can't
afford to buy what I need for them. The same goes for travel. Oh well. Such is
adult life.
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