June 2013-8

 

I'm home from my first real estate class.

I don't count the one Tom and I took when I was pregnant with our firstborn. That was almost thirty years ago…and to be honest, it just didn't click with me at the time…maybe because I was pregnant, attending class after working a twelve-hour shift.

Neither of us intended to become realtors. We were taking the course for an overview of Texas real estate; we knew we would be buying and selling soon.

But now it clicks. Helping people, looking at houses, getting outside, being challenged, always something new to learn…

Tonight, in between taking notes on my energetic instructor's lesson, highlighting text in my book, and sipping coffee, I was tempted to mentally kick myself for not doing this last year. Or thirty years ago.

But… I know in my heart I really wasn't ready until now. 


 

"Like this," Ann said, showing me how to weave the strips of bread dough around a Pyrex dish to make bread dough baskets like the ones we'd seen at Houston's Westheimer Art Festival. It was circa 1977 in her mother's kitchen. 

She made it look so easy, but when I attempted it, my fingers got in the way. The strips stretched too thin and broke. 

She laughed. "You better be a career woman!"

I nodded. That was already my plan. I was going to be a chemical engineer… 


 

"Why don't you have a real career?" my daughter asked me about ten years ago. 

I can't remember what triggered the question – probably some issue about money. As far back as my kids can remember, there's always been an issue about money, because there's always been only one major breadwinner. First me, then their dad. For them.

I'm not sure how I answered her question. It required a complicated explanation, and even though I have a tendency to give long, drawn-out answers, I bet I didn't mention how I never planned to be a stay-at-home mom when I was growing up, or how, all through three pregnancies, I longed for the day I didn't have to leave my babies behind and venture out to work a twelve-hour shift at a chemical plant where I might die in an explosion.

(Worst-case scenario, but it happens, and I'd fought fires out there, and when you have babies at home, that possibility always hovers in a corner of your mind.)

I probably didn't tell her how I'd had to go up the chain of command at the plant to fight for the right to use some of the three weeks of vacation days I'd earned to stay home with her big brother when his asthma first appeared.

Or how I would arrive home some mornings after working twelve hours to nap on the couch in between her brother's nebulizer treatments and take him to see the doctor as soon as the office opened, my eyes foggy with sleep. 

I might have tried describing how rewarding it was to be home with them as they grew, to have the flexibility to focus on my family and its needs, to be with them when they were sick, to volunteer my time for a dozen worthwhile organizations, to chaperone field trips…to just share memories of time spent together.

I'm not sure what I said.  All I remember is the pang I felt in my gut when she said it, because that's where I still carried the dream of finishing my degree and having some kind of career. 


 

"If you're a realtor, you will be showing properties on the weekends…" my son told me just last week. "You'd have to be a workaholic for awhile to gain some territory."

Working weekends? Workaholic? I realized my kids know nothing about my work history…or my work present.

I had a plan when I dropped out of college: I'd get a job where I could make enough to support myself and go back to college on my own. The only job that fit that description was "Chemical Plant Operator", so I went from plant to plant, all along the Houston Ship Channel, turning in one application after another. 

Long story short, at nineteen I was hired by DuPont to help start up a new methanol plant. After a few months in portable buildings, learning about the process, it began: twelve-hour shifts, almost seven days a week.

For thirteen years, through my wedding, my husband's college career, and three pregnancies, I worked nights, days, weekends, Christmas, Thanksgiving, Easter…twelve-to-sixteen hours at a time. I've had a mortgage payment since I was twenty.

I went back to school during my last pregnancy, taking writing classes at night at the community college, swapping shifts or using vacation so I didn't miss a class.

But of course, he wouldn't remember that. And he probably doesn't remember me going to class when he and his siblings were young, staying up for hours after reading them their bedtime stories to do my homework or to study for a test, munching on popcorn to stay awake. 

And he probably doesn't realize that now…mornings, nights, weekdays, weekends, 24/7…I'm either working at a paid part-time job, working on a photography or jewelry gig, blogging, marketing myself in photography or jewelry or blogging, slowly making progress on one of my many fictional works-in-progress…or reading up on how to improve in all of the above.

But how would he know? When my kids are home, I still focus on them.

 

Oh, mirror in the sky 
What is love? 
Can the child within my heart rise above? 
Can I sail thru the changing ocean tides? 
Can I handle the seasons of my life? 

Well, I've been afraid of changing 
'Cause I've built my life around you 
But time makes you bolder 
Children get older 
I'm getting older too.

~Stevie Nicks

 

Seasons have changed. I feel it in the air…I feel it in my heart. This is the path I'm supposed to take. If I'm going to work this hard, I'd like to have something to show for it. 

It's time, and I'm ready. And I know how to work.

 

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22 responses to “Evolution of a Career Woman”

  1. Ms. A Avatar

    It sounds to me like you have always been a career woman, it’s just that the career has varied over the years.
    Good luck with the classes!

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  2. LaTonya Avatar

    Barb, I’ve worked the three jobs, school and babies. I know your story and so do so many mothers of children who think their mothers just blew off dreams or work too hard, and worry that if we live our own lives now we might still be tired and overworked. But it’s our life, and we’ve likely lived longer than the years we have left. There is no time to waste and our dreams are real. I’m happy for you, Barb.

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  3. Walker Thornton Avatar

    What a wonderful feeling to know that you’ve found your place.
    My kids and I have never had that conversation about work. I was a stay at home mom for a number of years then I went to work when they were in elementary school….came back home and went back to a busier, more demanding job when they were a bit older. I wanted to be home with them–it was part of my job as a mother to be with them. Isn’t it funny what they see and don’t see.
    And now? I have no idea what they think. I talk about work but it’s less well-defined and probably doesn’t really count in some ways. The lesson for each of us? It’s about what we think and feel about our life. WE are the ones who find our way, our joys and more.
    I’m thrilled for you on several levels.

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  4. Barbara Shallue Avatar

    Well, you're right. I used to tell people I was a professional volunteer and mother. Going back to school became more than having a career. If it weren't for that money thing, I'd still go back. Or just write. But I think I'm going to love working in real estate, and that kind of surprises the "old me" inside. 
    Sent from my iPhone

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  5. Katie Avatar

    what a beautiful, thought “full” post, barbara. even though we still have one child at home full time, i can begin to see my new life on the horizon, and i get so excited about owning that new life. don’t get me wrong—i cry like a baby when i think of my kids out on their own—but it’s so wonderful to think that soon i’ll have another life to create: mine. good luck with all your new adventures, you’re going to be great!

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  6. Barbara Shallue Avatar

    Thanks, Katie. I know exactly how you're feeling right now! Soak up this time with your youngest, but don't feel guilty about looking forward to your empty nest. I think that's still good parenting – it lets your kids know you believe they're capable of flying! And they don't feel guilty about leaving!
    Sent from my iPhone

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  7. lisleman Avatar

    “…have something to show for it” From reading your blog I understand you have wonderful productive children. I would not say ALL of person’s success and helpfulness comes from their parents but I believe most of it does. Maybe it sounds sexist to say raising children is a career but children are always the future so their development is very important. More stay-at-home dads can be found today too. It all needs to be balanced but you know that as well as anyone since you are a mom. Good luck with the Real Estate stuff. I think it’s very tricky and unpredictable.

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  8. Rae Avatar
    Rae

    Tears flowing!!! Such a beautiful description of your LOVE for the way you did it, the decisions you made! Don’t you dare look back on one single second of how you raised your children with ANY regret!
    They are all three perfect and beautiful…JUST THE WAY THEY ARE!!
    And now…. IT’S YOUR TURN! Go for it!!! I believe in you!!!

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  9. lisa Avatar

    You GO, my friend, and congratulations on starting the class.
    I wish you the very best, and I do hope you’ll let us know how it goes, here.
    Happy day to you!

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  10. ZielonaMila Avatar

    Great post, beautiful flowers:) Greetings

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  11. Charlotte Dixon Avatar

    Good luck! I know you’ll do well in this new career just by reading the gumption you’ve always showed around work.

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  12. Otto von Münchow Avatar

    Sounds like you have always work hard whatever you have been doing. If that isn’t a career woman what is then? And I know it isn’t always easy to make kids understand that it isn’t the dough they should look for when planning their future work, but what inspires and fulfill them. My children have a hard time getting that point, and at least for the moment just want to go after the money. Anyway good luck with your new career. You sound very motivated, so I am sure it’s going to work.

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  13. Hilary Avatar

    Wonderful post, Barbara. I can feel your certainty. Go get ’em!

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  14. Elin Stebbins Waldal Avatar

    Barbara, This is a beautifully written post, thank you for sharing and although we don’t know each other I wish you the best in your new career path.

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  15. Beverly Diehl Avatar

    Clearly, one can be an attentive, loving mother whether you are present in the home 24/7, or employed/studying outside of it.
    It’s not the body being present that matters, so much as the heart & mind.
    I do believe most women feel more fulfilled, and safe, when they have employable skills and at least some personal goals outside of “make my children/spouse happy.” Sounds like you did just that, and it is wonderful that you are going back into a field that interested you, lo these many moons ago.

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  16. Barbara Shallue Avatar

    I agree with you that it's the loving heart and mind that count, not whether you work outside the home or not. My own mother worked outside the home, but I'd still put my money on her for the Best Mom Ever award. But I think having personal goals is part of good mothering.
     

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  17. Barbara Shallue Avatar

    Thanks, Hilary! One class down, five to go!! Yay!
     

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  18. Barbara Shallue Avatar

    I like your attitude, Otto. I've always said I worked harder when I was a stay-at-home mom than when I worked twelve hour shifts at the chemical plant. No scheduled breaks! I hope my kids can find some happy medium between making money and finding work that inspires and fulfills them. I know it's been a challenge for me.
     

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  19. Barbara Shallue Avatar

    Thanks for your vote of confidence, Charlotte!
     

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  20. Barbara Shallue Avatar

    Thank you, sweet friend!
     

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  21. Barbara Shallue Avatar

    Thank you so much, LaTonya! All we can do is make the most of the path before us!
     

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