Same Old Woes – New Peace


It is now 3pm on a Monday afternoon. Almost all or my tasks have been completed, except of course whatever amendments there may be to a few draft documents I have put on my principal’s table. He is out for a meeting and should be back shortly, I think. Until then, I am relatively free and this would not translate well onto my time sheet. This is my perennial problem. Yet, here I am sweating the issue week after week.

Show me the straw! (otherwise how to make bricks la)

Last night a friend called. She and her husband have just bought a house and had called me a few days before about doing the property transaction for them. I had then given them an estimate of our usual charge. Last night she said she found someone else who could do it much more cheaply. I was going to counter offer her and ask what rate could make us more competitive, when I recalled the conversation I had with Tim, a colleague, when we were driving back from the retreat on Saturday arvo.

The boss had launched into a tirade against Tim, implying he had done a deal behind the boss’s back, by agreeing to a lower retainer. He had hinted that I was doing the same, when my pastor wanted a will done and I asked the boss if the fee could be lower.

No, I wasn’t going through the trouble of getting work in by counter-offering a lower fee, when that sort of attitude was floating through the organisation. He didn’t trust me, didn’t trust Tim and is unlikely to start trusting us anytime soon. He recognises our reticence to charge high fees but somewhere in that very fertile mind of his, he harbours suspicions that our reticence isn’t entirely due to modesty or profit-shyness.

I wasn’t going to feed that suspicion by offering a deal on a Sunday night to an old friend. I therefore very promptly commended her for finding a cheaper solicitor and said yes, she should go ahead and appoint that solicitor. Sure, it would have meant no favours to my record of time sheet and billings but so what else is new…I sure can do without additional angst.

I don’t know – maybe after all these months sweating the issue, I’ve had it and would not let it get to me anymore. Obviously I still think about it an awful lot but just as clearly, I have stopped letting it upset me too much. I think about it, shrug the shoulders a bit and get on with other stuff. Maybe it is effluxion of time and with it comes numbness or familiarity which flushes out uneasiness. Maybe the peace of God which surpasses all understanding really is flowing through.

Unlike Malaysia, I cannot just walk away from a job and expect some alternatives to spring up (in fact even in Malaysia, that would no longer be true, if what I’ve been told/reading is accurate). But all the more so here, that is a tricky proposition. Walk away and the uncertainty, the very real prospects of having no alternatives save that which we create for our own, looms.

It is this knowledge which makes me think that it is the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, which is at work. The logical side of me would have made such thoughts/prospects unthinkable and therefore setting me off on a nerve-wrecking bout. Yet, I am learning to just quietly depend on God, whatever the outcome may be.

Another Email Exchange


Funny how I think that seems to sum up my state of mind now…


From: Ian Teh [mailto:ian@sharrockpitman.com.au]
Sent: Monday, 3 April 2006 2:11 PM
To:
Subject: RE: TIMBUKTU

Okay – I guess life goes on for most. You though, appear to keep busy enough for that statement to sound so understated. You should just get a partner in life who shares your passion for your canine friend – so that you can have more peace while at work (assuming your partner is less stressed up with work).

We have just moved into our own place about 1 1/2 weeks ago (after renting for over a year) so maybe (hopefully) not too long from now, we can start looking at getting a dog to share our house. I miss having a canine friend.

Life has been great in terms of quality time with the family, especially with Elysia. I have put job on the back burner as a priority so don’t really get hung up with the little things that used to bug me heaps. Also, God has taken on a more significant role in my life since around 1-2 years before leaving Malaysia, and I want to build on that more now.

So to answer your question, I guess yes I’m happier here in most ways but if I examine my job a lot more closely, that is where I am least happy.

Cheers

Teh

Regards

Ian


From:
Sent: Monday, 3 April 2006 12:53 PM
To: Ian Teh
Subject: RE: TIMBUKTU

U laughed tho’, right? J

Re me, I know it’s a familiar refrain by now, but it’s been BAD. Have had to work the past 3 or 4 (I lose track now) weekends, n on average until 10pm if not later every night. L T is fine. None too happy every morn when I have to go to work n put her in the kitchen, but she’s used to it by now, I have brought her in a couple of times when I had to work late / over the weekend, but I’ve now figured (ding, ding.. lightbulb a bit fused) that it’s better to just take the laptop home n work from there. Ack.

How are things at your end? How’s wifey n kiddy n Roy Teh n the job? U happier there?

—–Original Message—–
From: Ian Teh [mailto:ian@sharrockpitman.com.au]
Sent: Monday, April 03, 2006 10:28 AM
To:
Subject: RE: TIMBUKTU

A red-neck through and through. How have you been, my friend? How is Tasha doing?

Regards

Ian


From:
Sent: Monday, 3 April 2006 12:19 PM
Subject: FW: TIMBUKTU


Subject: Fwd: TIMBUKTU

The National Poetry Contest had come down to two semi-finalists — a Yale graduate and a redneck from Wyoming. They were given a word, then allowed two minutes to study the word and come up with a poem that contained the word. The word they were given was “Timbuktu”.

First to recite his poem was the Yale graduate. He confidently stepped to the microphone and said:

“Slowly across the desert sand
Trekked a lonely caravan
Men on camels, two by two
Destination: Timbuktu.”

The crowd went crazy. No way could the redneck top that, they thought.

The redneck, with sweat rolled down his face, made his way to the microphone, he said:

“A friend and I a hunting went,
We spied three maidens in a tent,
They being three, we being two,
I bucked one and Tim bucked two.”

The redneck won!!



_____________________________________________________________________________

Retreat? How Far?


The firm had a retreat in this place called Sorrento, somewhere in the Mornington Peninsula south east of Melbourne. It was maybe a little under 100km from the office, and we all left office around 10.30am on Friday. We got there by around lunch, checked into this rustic little hotel called the Oceanic, and stayed there till Saturday afternoon, around 4pm.

It was a series of meetings, discussions, and eating. It’s the usual gaffe about motivation, buying-in into a team atmosphere, projects like advertising, client feedbacks, personal responsibilities and goals and the rest of such corporate mumbo jumbo, except this was a little suburban firm trying to be something more significant. Work long enough in any given field and you’d be dragged through these sessions. They’re not bad, were in fact quite fun but I’d much rather be with the family.

I guess a lot of credit must go the my boss for wanting to instil values and directions, but sometimes I wonder if time and energy is best spent elsewhere. Our work should not be more than to put food on the table. If it takes over so that we spend all waking hours thinking about it (which sessions like what we just had are designed to make you do) then it becomes problematic. That is not what I came to Melbourne for. I don’t want to be so into building something that I have little energy or time for other things.

What do I want to do now? First, I want to be still fresh in the mind when I go home after work everyday, to exchange ideas with my daughter about her school and church projects and issues. I want to get more into her life, as well as that of my wife. Sure, I may still not be as worked up as in KL, say, but such sessions as those we just had are first steps to a more professionally obsessed life. When we talk about commitment and excellence in work, we tend to start our journey towards work and away from a few other things. Our resources are finite and something’s got to give.

Anyway, secondly I want to be available for more of church work. Same issues as per above I guess.

Maybe I’m just subconsciously working out an exit plan from here, making a list of justifications. Maybe the various episodes in the past are all adding up and coming to a boil now and I am planning for alternatives, and am subconsciously looking at the other side of the ledger.

It was a weekend of retreat in work, maybe a lot further back than I had planned…