I’m not sure why this is the case—though I can guess—but Polly,
of the New York Magazine Ask Polly column, seems to attract whiny, complaining
millennials. I imagine that they believe Polly to be a kindred spirit, even
though she is not a millennial.
Today’s letter writer is Crumbling. We feel her pain. She
worked hard to develop a career as a writer. She even went to grad school. She believes, because she is an
entitled brat, that because she worked hard the world ought to be offering her
a job as a great writer… in her mid-twenties.
She has gotten a job that leaves her enough time to pursue her writing, but
she hates it and complains about it. She thinks it’s beneath
her. Obviously, this makes it difficult for her to sustain friendships, but she
does have a loving and supportive boyfriend.
Of course, she was brought up in an abusive family. Have you
noticed that everyone was brought up in an abusive family. It’s a therapy culture
mantra—there is no such thing as not having been brought up in an abusive
family. For decades now we have been having a national conversation about abuse, of every color, shape and variety. Have you noticed, the more we talk about abuse the more abuse there is. Anyway, Crumbling has mental health issues. Who doesn't?
Crumbling writes:
I have
a history of depression and anxiety. I’m from a really dysfunctional, abusive
family. Emotionally abusive … and physically abusive. Everything I’ve done in
my life so far has been in this desperate attempt to run away from my family
and to simultaneously make them proud. Make them incapable of hurting me. And
there have been moments when it worked and I felt safe.
She won herself an M.F.A. and got a job—which she
resents. And she resents her bosses, because they seem to be suffering from
white privilege:
I just
graduated from this M.F.A. writing program. I was able to get a job sooner than
many of my friends from grad school, but I’m an assistant. Which is kind of the
norm for my industry but it means I have to do things that feel a little
degrading. And my bosses are kind but are very rich and privileged, and can at
times treat me like the hired help … which I guess I am. But it’s hard when
you’ve worked so hard to get somewhere professionally and you end up lying to
your parents and friends at home about what you do on a daily basis so that
they don’t know you’re spending your days getting coffee and researching dog
nannies for your boss’s epileptic dog.
She has her first job, but it is not a glamorous job writing
for a major publication. So she feels spoiled and a failure:
And I
know I sound spoiled … but I feel like a big failure here. I’m so fucking poor.
Every day I wake up in a sweat over bills and rent money. And I apply to new
jobs, but sometimes I can’t apply because I feel so down and lost, I end up
swimming in my depression for the day. I don’t know what job would be better.
The other jobs in my industry are intense, 12-hours-a-day jobs where I wouldn’t
have room for creative things. It would be all getting coffee and all errands.
But my job makes me miserable and I can’t afford anything. I just feel trapped.
And this is what the next decade or two will be like, right? Rejection, trials,
getting coffee, trying to write even when you’re depressed.
What she really want is a low stress job that leaves
her room for her creative things. And yet, such jobs do not pay very well. It's a trade-off. Life is all about trade-offs. It’s a choice. She thinks that if she gets a high stress job that pays better she will never become Jane Austen. She
has made a choice. Since she’s a millennial, she complains about it to her friends. But she
discovers that her friends do not like being receptacles for her pain, so she
has chosen to stop the complaining. It's not a bad idea:
But
slowly, I stopped telling her about when I felt down or if I was going through
a hard time. Because I know she wouldn’t be able to handle it, and in the past,
she was never very good at cheering me up or really being there. So I pushed my
feelings down. And because of my job and depression lately, I just couldn’t
take being friends with her anymore. This devastated me. Why did I work so hard
to land here if I’m just in this crappy job and hurting? Why can’t I just suck
it up and be positive and competitive and driven and ambitious like everyone
else, like how I used to be? I feel like such a loser for being this broken
about all this.
Besides, she has a boyfriend who feels her pain:
He
really knows me and knows how much I’m hurting and he’s been helping. But it’s
still so fucking hard. Some days I don’t know how to get out of bed. I do get
up, though. I pull myself out of bed and go to work every day and tell myself
that I can do this and even if bad things happen, I will survive. But how can I
make this better? How do you find joy or peace when you feel like your life is
out of your hands and falling apart around you? How do you write when you feel
like such a mess? How do you feel better when you’re sad and sick from
disappointment in others and in yourself? How do put on a game face and charge
into the world, into your job, into anything ready to succeed and believe in
yourself when you just feel like crumbling?
As it happens, on this rare occasion, Polly has something
useful to add. Before she starts whining about feeling your feelings and before
she starts handing out bad advice, she begins with this:
The
short answer is that you develop good habits that help you get through the day,
even when you’re crumbling.
Good advice, advice you should take to heart. If you need
more encouragement, you can read Adm. William McRaven’s new book: Make Your Bed. It will make a great Christmas present for your millennial friends.
As happens with Polly, one piece of good advice is quickly
drowned in a torrent of psychobabble. This time, Polly is offering up the
lean-in form of contemporary psychobabble, and tells Crumbling how to sabotage her job and career and her friendships:
The
answer here is not to just suck it up and be positive, though. That’s what got
you into this shit in the first place. The answer is to ask for what you want
directly. Ask your friend if you can lean on her. Don’t blame, just say, “I
need a friend I can call when I’m down. If I don’t trust that I can do that, I
lose my faith in our friendship.” She will either show up or disappear. She
will either agree to your very simple, non-blaming request, or she will make
excuses and counterattack. Don’t get drawn into a debate. Don’t engage without
a good-faith effort on her part to tell you directly that she values your
friendship and she understands that asking for what you want doesn’t make you
weak or needy. STAND UP FOR YOUR NEEDS.
Leaning in and standing up are not quite the same thing, but
exactly what NEEDS are in question her. The need to whine. The need to abuse
your friends with constant complaining. Here's a piece of advice: any time anyone starts wailing, But, what about my needs? it's time to decamp.
To add a little extra bad advice, Polly recommends that
Crumbling learn to say No, to speak up for herself and to get herself fired:
At your
job, a similar dynamic is unfolding. People like you and me work very hard and
earn gold stars, but we never learn how to say no. We are valued by the
charismatic narcissists we work for (okay, fine, they’re everywhere, but we
also tend to appeal to other people with narcissistic streaks, so they hire us
and love us). But we resent them. We don’t speak up for ourselves and then we
randomly explode or just quit mysteriously. Or our employers start to feel
suspicious of us. Can they really trust us? We act so weird, and we don’t
really tell them the truth anymore.
As I said, this is mental drool. If you want some better
advice, heed the advice given out by Colin Powell many years back. When Powell
was a teenager he landed his first job sweeping out a factory floor. He did not
complain about the indignity of leading the broom brigade. He said to himself
that he would be the best they had ever seen at sweeping the factory floor.
So, one day, the owner was walking through the factory and
he saw this young man working with uncommon energy and industriousness at
sweeping floors. The owner looked at his associate and said, in reference to
Powell: Why is he still sweeping floors?
The moral of the story. If you are great at whatever you are doing, people will naturally want to give you greater responsibility and
authority. If you whine and complain all the time they will think that you have
reached the limit of your capacity and that you do not care about contributing
to the company.
6 comments:
A couple generations of kids have been told to find something they love and do that for a living. It seems like such backwards advice to me. Only a rare few will be so lucky as that. What they should be telling them it's "whatever you do do it well and then you will take pride in it and feel good about yourself."
Heck, there's a whole song about it. If you can't have the one you love, love the one you're with. Thank you Stephen Stills
Powell's story is a good one to consider, but it might be flawed.
At least sweeping is visible work, where someone can observe your gusto, and consider you're hinting at a desire for promotion. But other work, including writing, you're not really being watched, and its hard to see how hard you're working from the outside. And if your writing is so good, it needs no corrections, it can easily be taken for granted.
As a programmer, I've never had a problem with promotion, or at least there's no where I'd want to be promoted to. Being promoted might be a sign that I was not doing my work good enough to keep doing it. I'm sure being a writer would be harder work, and my perfectionism would probably get in the way, while you can leave ugly code in for years, and the users don't care.
She's an MFA, who wants to be a writer. but doesn't talk about writing. Writers write. She's not a writer, she's another wannabe infatuated with the idea of being a writer, just another cubicle drone. She's got this conflicted sense of identity between want and is, so she's frustrated.
While it's fun to blame this chick for digging a hole, who handled her the shovel? Who told her, starting when she was a teenager, that an MFA (or any degree other than an MRS) was a letter of transit to middle class life? Parents, kolleges with the aid of govt. backed student loans available to MFA students .... spread out the blame where it also belongs.
She used the phrase "incredibly intense" twice in one sentence. It takes a serious tin ear to do something like that. I don't know what she should be when she grows up, but probably not a writer.
Ambition:
"I want to move hundreds of thousands of people with my writing genius. I didnt do it yesterday. I might not do it tomorrow....Do I have ANY metric for success? If not,could I have been making SOME progress towards my goal and not known it?"
They say : "Writers write."
- shoe
A recently found publisher's reply to one of above writers submissions:
http://neveryetmelted.com/2017/12/13/rejection-letter/
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