Coming out of the maze
May. 4th, 2012 12:03 amI am allowed to write about work again. After weeks of agonizing, an embarrassing number of flip-flops, several periods of threatening and bargaining, hours of meetings, and a lot of crying as if I had real problems, I'm officially planning to switch groups at work. Both teams sent out announcements about it today, which makes it real, although I won't move until July.
I'm not sure I've ever faced such a complex decision before. This involved, in part:
YOU ARE LOST IN A MAZE OF TWISTY LITTLE PASSAGES, ALL DIFFERENT.
And it's impressive how my brain managed to take two essentially good options and worry that much about it all. For a solid 10 days there I was convinced that either option was BAD... I mean, that either one would be the defining mistake of my entire 30s and I would spend all my time gazing wistfully over at the team I wasn't on.
In the end, a wildcard came flying out of nowhere on Tuesday: a very good engineer who is moving to our office, who was interested in the same two positions I was and misses the chaos of working on the visible stuff. (Girl, have I got the group for you!) She has the capacity to be energized by things that totally drain me. One look at her and I realized that a) she's my perfect backfill... replacement, upgrade! no need to feel guilty about leaving if she's coming in and b) that shit does totally drain me. I really do need a change. That's that, then.
I'm not sure I've ever faced such a complex decision before. This involved, in part:
- Local manager versus remote manager?
- Be someone's first remote sub-manager... dicey... or be in someone's first batch of sub-managers ever, when you think that'll involve a major adjustment?
- User visible stuff with lots of cancelled projects and frustrating priority changes, or grungier less glamorous infrastructure with a better decision maker?
- Work for a major product, or a smaller team on which your mere presence will be vital for growth at your site?
- Work with superstar peers of varying degrees of friendliness, or unknowns who love you?
- Leave something you spent the last three years building some identity around?
- Keep a good relationship with a frustratingly flighty manager, or risk a steady-seeming but new manager?
- Work whose value is easier to prove, or harder?
- Manage two of your friends, who you like but that's the whole problem, or people less familiar to you?
- Greater challenge, or less stress?
YOU ARE LOST IN A MAZE OF TWISTY LITTLE PASSAGES, ALL DIFFERENT.
And it's impressive how my brain managed to take two essentially good options and worry that much about it all. For a solid 10 days there I was convinced that either option was BAD... I mean, that either one would be the defining mistake of my entire 30s and I would spend all my time gazing wistfully over at the team I wasn't on.
In the end, a wildcard came flying out of nowhere on Tuesday: a very good engineer who is moving to our office, who was interested in the same two positions I was and misses the chaos of working on the visible stuff. (Girl, have I got the group for you!) She has the capacity to be energized by things that totally drain me. One look at her and I realized that a) she's my perfect backfill... replacement, upgrade! no need to feel guilty about leaving if she's coming in and b) that shit does totally drain me. I really do need a change. That's that, then.
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Date: 2012-05-06 07:30 pm (UTC)It's amazing how the culture we're in encourages people to always take on the greatest challenge, whether or not it's appropriate. The choice I made was seen by a couple of people as the one that would present less challenge (even though I will have to learn and grow a fair amount there, too), and I really had to struggle with that. In acroyoga there's a core principle of "accurate self-assessment", where people are encouraged to decide for themselves "you know, I don't think I'm ready for that; let's practice the last variation some more." I wish that same principle were widely known and upheld in business, but it's not, which makes it that much more difficult to discover and stand by.
Hope this isn't a repeat for you -- LJ ate my first attempt at this, so I did my best to retype my thoughts.
no subject
Date: 2012-05-21 04:32 pm (UTC)Yup, second maternity leave. Child 2 is 7 weeks old, and I'm basking in the knowledge that I'll never be pregnant again! :)
You are very right. I wasn't sure about managing but took on the first team. I still wasn't sure but took on the second. And now, at the end of my second maternity leave, I'm still not sure. I really hope I'm not proving the Peter Principle correct!
I'm not freaking out about it all as much this time around, because I know that:
* Working in software is still a great way to make a living and support my family.
* My employer is a lot more interested in keeping me than in seeing me in any given role. I see folks change roles all the time.
* I'm working 4 day weeks through the end of this year, so I hopefully won't feel so suffocated.
* I have a plan to fit in some coding again, between all the meetings and email. I really miss coding.
I'm really hoping that the coding plan, in particular, works out. I don't think I'd mind managing so much if I was still a direct part of the creation process.