<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[the feminist librarian]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[http://thefeministlibrarian.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[Anna Clutterbuck-Cook]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://thefeministlibrarian.com/author/feministlib/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[30 @ 30: work and vocation&nbsp;[#9]]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p>If I had wanted to be a librarian all my life, I suppose this could have been a much shorter blog post (and maybe I&#8217;d have been able to finish it for last Wednesday)! But actually, the decision to become a professional librarian came relatively late in my exploration of possible vocations. Looking back, that fact seems sort of inexplicable. After all, I grew up living a scant 1.5 blocks from the <a href="http://www.herrickdl.org/">local public library</a> and applied for my first library card the moment I could <strike>sign</strike> print my name. I even volunteered there as a child, honing my alphabetization skills by re-shelving the chapter books in the middle-grade fiction section one afternoon a week. It was a great way to discover new authors. </p>
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<td class="tr-caption" style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/eridony/sets/72157618279546905/detail/?page=7">via</a> </td>
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<p>Still, &#8220;librarian&#8221; didn&#8217;t make the cut as consistently as a number of other options on the what-do-you-want-to-be-when-you-grow-up? list. As I was just relating to a friend recently, when I was a wee child under the age of ten my most ardent desire was to become an actress in musical theater &#8212; my very first vinyl record was the Broadway cast recording of <em>Annie Get Your Gun</em> and you bet your bottom dollar I knew every word.</p>
<p>I also considered &#8220;lighthouse keeper&#8221; after seeing <em>Pete&#8217;s Dragon</em> at an impressionable age.</p>
<p>As I&#8217;ve <a href="http://annajcook.blogspot.com/2011/08/30-30-not-being-parent-4.html">written about previously</a>, I always felt comfortable caring for young people and for a long time assumed that parenting and perhaps some sort of professional social work occupation were in my future. When I hit puberty and became fascinated with pregnancy and childbirth, I considered midwifery (and later doula training) as a possible option. I still think about this &#8212; the doula/midwifery thing &#8212; as a possible second career, though right now our family can&#8217;t really handle my taking on one more new thing.</p>
<p>Perhaps the most abiding vocational dream I had growing up was a vision of <a href="http://annajcook.blogspot.com/2011/08/30-30-detre-et-decrire-5.html">becoming a writer</a> of fiction. I figured I might combine this with being a bookshop owner &#8212; preferably a picturesque bookshop by the seaside, complete with the bookshop cat(s) or dog(s), and a small apartment above the shop in which to live.</p>
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<td class="tr-caption" style="text-align:center;">me (circa 1993)</td>
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<p>After I started volunteering at the local history museum as an adolescent, the bookseller/author dream was joined by the possibility of becoming a museum curator, or perhaps working at a living history site somewhere (the romance of this only increased by Nancy Bond&#8217;s novel <em><a href="http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/15222210">Another Shore</a></em> in which the protagonist is sucked back in time through working at a living history village). This was how I ended up taking History classes in addition to English and Women&#8217;s Studies classes in college &#8212; and ultimately discovering my love of research and scholarly writing &#8212; and how I ended up being encouraged to consider graduate school as an option. </p>
<p>For someone who&#8217;d waffled about even attending undergraduate classes, graduate school was an idea that I was both flattered by (I had an incredible group of faculty mentors) and resistant to. </p>
<p><strong>Which is actually how I ended up in library school.</strong> Mostly because I <em>really</em> didn&#8217;t want to apply for PhD programs. I knew I didn&#8217;t want to teach and by the time I graduated from college in 2005 I was fairly sure I didn&#8217;t want to get into the business of independent book selling &#8212; I just don&#8217;t have the business head for it. A year and a half in corporate book selling at Barnes &amp; Noble was enough to tell me I&#8217;d go mad in that environment. I was good at the customer service side of things, but hated the corporate pressure to compete internally over sales and memberships and all that crap. Just &#8212; no. I couldn&#8217;t be bothered. Which would have meant not moving beyond part-time sales clerk, no matter how well I knew the stock.</p>
<p>Librarianship (alongside continuing my studies in history) seemed like a good way to compromise on all of these competing interests without closing any doors for good on my research or feminist interests. And if my present-day occupation(s) &#8212; including this blog &#8212; are anything to go by, I&#8217;d say the gamble has by-and-large paid off when it comes to quality of life and work-life balance. I have a job that I find intellectually stimulating and socially responsible. I realize that one (a satisfying, respectably-compensated job) doesn&#8217;t automatically follow from the other (an MLS degree), but putting one foot in front of the other in that general direction brought me to Boston and <a href="http://annajcook.blogspot.com/2010/12/changes-afoot-in-jobland-part-one.html">eventually</a> <a href="http://annajcook.blogspot.com/2010/12/changes-afoot-in-jobland-part-two-on.html">brought me here</a>.</p>
<p>But what does it mean, to me specifically, to be at this point where I have a professional job? What do my career choices (at this point in my life) say about how I think about the labor we perform? And what we are called to contribute to the world? I don&#8217;t have any pat answers to those big meta questions. But I do have a few observations.</p>
<p><strong>I grew up in a home where what people did as paid employment didn&#8217;t define them. </strong>My mother worked in preschool education and went to college for English and Architecture before leaving the workforce to pursue full-time parenting. My father took his (still current) position as a bookstore manager before completing his BA and has remained in that job throughout his career. While he actively pursues professional development and has re-invented the role of the bookstore (and bookstore manager) several times over, it has never been <em>who he is</em> any more than being a full-time parent has been who my mother is. I could also introduce them, variously, as &#8220;cyclist,&#8221; &#8220;cartographer,&#8221; &#8220;calligrapher,&#8221; &#8220;fiber artist,&#8221; &#8220;writer,&#8221; etc. While we children were encouraged to follow our passions and do what we love, we were also not required to turn those loves into money-making work. </p>
<p><strong>I believe in professional standards and ethics, but resist the hierarchy of professionalization.</strong> I&#8217;ve written about the issue of professionalization and one-ups-manship before on this blog (see <a href="http://annajcook.blogspot.com/2010/05/to-be-or-not-to-be-professional-and.html">here</a> and <a href="http://annajcook.blogspot.com/2010/09/librarianship-dick-waving-contest.html">here</a>) and in a slightly different context over at Harpyness (see <a href="http://www.harpyness.com/2011/08/30/feminism-for-real-part-twelve/">here</a>). What it boils down to is that I value people&#8217;s knowledge and skill set, not their credentials &#8212; and I don&#8217;t trust the credentialing system to always give me accurate information about an individual&#8217;s abilities. I imagine this comes from being homeschooled. And to be frank, it also comes from having been through graduate school and seeing first-hand the work my fellow students were doing. Schooling doesn&#8217;t always equal expertise.</p>
<p><strong>&#8220;Work&#8221; is not always synonymous with &#8220;vocation.&#8221; </strong>My job is to be a reference librarian. While I see that job as <em>part </em>of my vocation, it does not encompass it. I&#8217;m not precisely certain, at this juncture of my life, what my vocation is &#8230; but I believe I could pursue it in a number of different guises, librarian and blogger being only two of a myriad options.What&#8217;s my vocation? I was lying awake at 4am this morning trying to think about what aspects of my work I think of myself as being <em>called to do</em> in some sort of &#8220;I must do this or fail to thrive&#8221; sense. Writing and thinking about ideas certainly falls into that category. Cultivating and nurturing intimate relationships (sexual and non-sexual). Being conscious about the way my life choices effect others is another part of my answer to the question &#8220;how to live?&#8221; But none of this requires a particular type of job in order to pursue.</p>
<p><strong>&#8220;Work&#8221; is also not separate from &#8220;life,&#8221; any more than &#8220;school&#8221; and &#8220;life&#8221; are mutually exclusive. </strong>Growing up outside of school, I find, has had an enduring effect on how I consider the dividing line between what I understand to be &#8220;work&#8221; and everything else. I don&#8217;t think that &#8220;work&#8221; and &#8220;play&#8221; have to be (or ideally should be) mutually exclusive categories. Nor do I think that &#8220;life&#8221; is something we should picture as being put on hold when we go to work. I realize that for the majority of paid employees, that is the reality &#8212; they aren&#8217;t allowed to be themselves in the workplace. But even when we work in shitty workplaces, that too <em>is </em>part of our lives rather than being something that puts our lives on hold. </p>
<p>While I do hold certain expectations that personal drama be kept from bleeding over into our workplace lives, I also don&#8217;t believe there are hard and fast rules about this. Sometimes shit happens, and sometimes it happens while we&#8217;re at work. While there are aspects of my non-work life I don&#8217;t feel interested in sharing with my colleagues (or really anyone outside my intimate circle), I also appreciate a workplace that recognizes I am a human being with a full life and interests that may fall outside of the scope of my job description.</p>
<p><strong>At the same time, I don&#8217;t want work to <em>be</em> my life. </strong>I don&#8217;t want to be defined by my profession, and I don&#8217;t want my life to be dictated by it either. I&#8217;m lucky enough to have a boss that chastises me for checking my email at home (even if she does it herself), and who insists that I work my 35 hours/week and only that with rare exceptions (which are always acknowledged as exceptions). I appreciate that I can walk away from work at the end of the day and it doesn&#8217;t follow me home. I&#8217;m also grateful that there are times when my work is so interesting that I kinda <em>wish </em>I could take it home. But for the most part, I don&#8217;t. Because I want to make sure I leave room for my other (my vocational?) priorities.</p>
<p><strong>So where am I headed from here? </strong>My bare minimum expectation for &#8220;success&#8221; as a worker is to have a job where I&#8217;m respected as a human being and as a laborer, a job that&#8217;s intellectually stimulating, fairly autonomously-directed (i.e. I have freedom to do my work independently), and a job that pays for good quality of life. <strong>I have that right now</strong>, which is a position of social privilege in these economic times. There are junctures when I wish we were a little more financially stable, or when I wish we had more discretionary income with which to travel or give gifts (see the upcoming installment &#8220;money&#8221;), but for now I am content.</p>
<p>Did I imagine this sort of work life when I was a child? Probably not (mostly because the internets were a thing of the future; I learned to use libraries when card catalogs were still, actually, <em>card catalogs</em>). </p>
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<td class="tr-caption" style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/cincinnatipubliclibrary/3392293417/in/photostream/">via</a></td>
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<p>But I don&#8217;t think my child-self would be disappointed with where I&#8217;ve ended up thus far. Which I feel is about the highest form of praise I could ask for.</p>
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