The Demolition of the Bowling Alley

BowlingAlley

It was a big week in the Himmelreich-Truman household. And in the city of Callie, Arapaho.

  1. After exactly three years of service, my wife gave her ninety-day notice to Baxter Hospital.
  2. The following day, she received a Letter of Intent for a new position elsewhere.
  3. The hospital seems to be in a position where it feels like being Bregna material (explanation below) is about as important as the job you do. A recent pair of terminations reinforced this point.
  4. We turned over the keys to our old house.
  5. Callie’s bowling alley was torn down.

Clancy’s imminent departure has been known for some time now. She gave them a year’s notice because she wanted to give them every opportunity to recruit someone and not be short-handed. It turned out not to make much of a difference. The ultimate reason for her leaving is that the position ceased to be a good fit for her. The job description changed over time, as did her priorities. They technically found a replacement for her, but are still going to be short two FP-OB’s. As it stands, they’re interviewing people who wouldn’t be able to start until 2015. She wants to change her career trajectory. Baxter is unwilling to accommodate that.

The position is out east. Details on that to follow. We’ve been burned before, so we’re not counting on it materializing since it depends on things like state and federal funding that is always a precarious wager. It’s a one-year training job. It pays a little over a third of what she gets now. Money is going to be tight since, unlike her residency and previous fellowship, it’s unlikely that I will be able to work. We want the baby to have a parent at home. That’s the bad news. The good news is a fresh start with an employer that looks at the wide variety of skills she brings to the table – as well as the desire to gain more skills – as an asset rather than merely something to be grudgingly accommodated.

If there was any doubt to the extent to which we would never feel welcome here, it ended right after her resignation when her best friend at the hospital was let go. First, a bit about Bregna. Bregna is actually a former employer of mine. They are infamous in the Colosse area for being the employer that cycles through IT people at a very quick clip. The average employee lasts less than four months. On employee satisfaction surveys, they are one of the five worst employers in the entire nation. Which sounds crazy. Crazy like a fox, I’ve determined. You see, Bregna was ever in search for a very particular kind of employee. And I’ve become convinced that the bullcrud they put you through was essentially a test to see whether or not you were Bregna material. Are you the kind of guy that doesn’t mind your restroom breaks being monitored for duration and frequency? Are you the kind of guy who wants every room, hallway, and restroom you enter logged into a system so they can give you advice on how to be more efficient? Do you think it signals your company cares when they tell you that you need to get a new roommate because your current roommate left the company? If so, then you are who Bregna wants. When I left, and they told me that they were sorry to see me go, I didn’t know whether to be proud of the deception or horrified that I could pose as an android so successfully.

No matter what her skills, Clancy was not Bregna material. Or Baxter material, in this case. They didn’t monitor restroom breaks, but they were looking for a very particular kind of individual. Clancy wasn’t it. And while they tolerated her because they desperately need someone to do what she does, it’s not sustainable to be tolerated. Nobody was fooled. They wanted somebody else and she wanted to be somewhere else. As convenient as it’s all been, it simply couldn’t go on forever. The axe falling on those around her only reinforced the point.

Which brings us to Callie and our failed experiment here. I came to Callie with as open mind as I could muster. I wasn’t sure about how well I would do in a town of this size, as far away from towns of notably larger size. But I was willing to try. I was going to join a bowling league. I like to bowl. It would be a good way to meet people. A starting point to insert myself into the local social community. The folks here seemed nice. They are nice. They like to hunt and fish. I don’t, really.

I do like to bowl. The bowling alley closed in between the interview and our arrival. It was always supposed to reopen, but each planned purchase fell through. And the building stood there, reminding me of what was supposed to be here that wasn’t. A home, if not a permanent one then one I could call my home for a while. The building stood vacant and the town never felt like home. Ever the hope that someone might move in. It never happened. And this week, they tore it down. The illusion was demolished.

And we left the house for another. We loved that house. We did. But even with that wonderful house, things went wrong somehow. Our relationship with the landlords deteriorated. I somehow found myself having to clean the door of a garage that they planned to tear down. A pipe leaked and I found myself cleaning the dirtiest water I’ve ever seen off a basement floor that was always half-finished. The landlords were upset that I hadn’t dismantled the stove and cleaned the parts.

It’s all quite unfortunate. The place where my daughter was born will always be a mostly bad memory. The hospital she was born at will be a place her mother was miserable. We have our baby girl, we have our wonderful dog, and everything important to us is leaving town with us.

I sincerely hope that, going forward, I will be a more pleasant person. Not to mention a happier one. These past three years have taken their toll on me.

Will Truman

Will Truman is the Editor-in-Chief of Ordinary Times. He is also on Twitter.

18 Comments

  1. Shake the dust from your feet as you leave town and just keep looking forward.
    Best luck to you, my friend.

    • That connection had crossed my mind. Though you have little desire to return to Tennessee, we might be interested in returning to Arapaho at some point. As bad as this experience was for us, we really like the state.

  2. They put a parking lot
    On a piece of land
    Where the supermarket
    Used to stand

    Before that they
    Put up a bowling alley
    On the site that used
    To be the local palais

  3. I am neither Bregna or Baxter material either. That sounds quite horrific!

  4. Dealing with a huge salary hit for a year will be tough, but if it gets you all on a good path you’ll look back on this as being very worth it. My wife and I struggle with similar things as she stays home with the Gravatar and as much as I’d like to ditch this little town and start over somewhere else, we’re always afraid to sign up for a hit to my income since that’s all there is.

    Best of luck to you and Clancy and Lain coming out East.

    • Ack. You’re not only in the Empire State of the South, but you’re in a small town there? I hope I’m not being condescending my offering my condolences. As much as I’ve had trouble adjusting to small-town life here, neither my wife nor I could really imagine doing it in most of the South.

      We’re really hoping that everything comes up roses with this latest change of trajectory. One way or another, things really needed to change for us.

      • Officially I’m still in the Atlanta MSA. 10 years ago the town was 12K people and definitely not a part of the greater Atlanta metro but as prices and congestion north of the city has increased, more people have taken to the southern exurbs and my town is ~35K plus a lot more in unincorporated subdivisions. I am sure it’s not ‘small’ by Callie standards. There’s a Target and a Wal-Mart and department stores and a Club Warehouse and two movie theaters.

        However, the cultural thing is there. It’s not a place for members of the professional liberal class; it’s not a place for folks with interests that border on the geeky, either.
        If you’re a conservative Baptist who likes lousy restaurants – this place is for you.

        They just rebuilt our downtown (they did some Zombieland scenes here). The main square has several new plaques and statues honoring specific Confederate soldiers from the area for their dedication and sacrifice for the cause. It’s a culture I can’t reconcile myself to at all.

        Interestingly, I used to live further away in my wife’s hometown – a college town/county seat that used to be a big textiles hub at the turn of the century. I felt a lot more comfortable there on the Alabama/Georgia border than I do here just 25 miles from downtown Atlanta. Some of that is the presence of college professors, art studios and museums that are nonexistent in our current home. Some of it is the distance from Atlanta (~70 miles) breeds less resentment to urban issues and outsiders than you see in the suburbs of Atlanta.

        • Yeah, 35k isn’t small by out-here-standards, but it’s all comparative. It’s interesting that the suburb (exurb?) has more of the unfortunate southern aspects than did the further away place. It being a college town can help, I suppose, but suburbs were generally okay back home.

        • A few months ago I was playing with county-level cartograms for the presidential vote in Georgia for other purposes. Assuming majorities for Obama is a reasonable surrogate for attitudes generally, there are some interesting patterns. A lot of fairly intense red on the outskirts of the Atlanta MSA, and quite clearly a number of smaller cities that are much less conservative.

          • For “a number of smaller cities” read “a number of smaller cities elsewhere in the state” meaning well outside the Atlanta MSA.

          • Interesting stuff, Michael.

            I think one would find that the big cities in Georgia generally show comparable increased affinity for more Democratic/liberal policies, just starting from a much more republican baseline.

  5. You, Clancy, Lain and the wonderful dog are all healthy and a happy family – that’s a lot. I hope the new job comes through, or an even better one and you find a new community that’s a better fit.

    You might be less entertaining if you are less grumpy, though, so think of us and don’t get too contented.

  6. Sincerely hoping that everyone gets what they need out of the relocation. And I’ll understand if you no longer “have my back” on certain western things :^)

    • We’ll have to see if our heart leaves this place with us, or whether we have to come back to pick it up. As I mention to Burt, we like Arapaho. We like the region.

  7. Tru dat Will.

    I spent 5 years at a company that was a bad fit for me. It took 2 years to figure it out and we were all happy when I bailed. Those bridges I burned, and happily so. The next several years, professionally, were fantastic.

    Here’s hoping after a short struggle, things will be in the “all good” range!

Comments are closed.