In earlier years, I worked at menial jobs: maid, barmaid, file clerk, exotic dancer--the sort of jobs that were available to women in the 1950s and 60s who couldn't take shorthand and hadn't sat through college classes with boys sneering at them.
After my children were grown, I acquired a BA degree in journalism "with high distinction"--as it is written on my diploma. As you can imagine, I'm proud of that! I'm even prouder that I was awarded membership in the Phi Beta Kappa honor society. I would never again have to wear my knees out on cold floors or inhale yellow nicotine floating near the ceiling of some bar. Indeed, I was looking forward to interviewing world-renowned experts and investigating presidential mishaps at, say, the Washington Post.
I soon discovered, however, that I would be lucky to land any job at all in my field. This was during the Watergate years. There were so many journalism graduates in 1981, the year I graduated, that only a very few lucky stiffs with good connections could find jobs in their field.
So, for the next 30 years, I worked as a technical writer and an IT specialist for several international corporations. I retired from drudgery in 2018, moved to the backwoods of Oregon, and for a few years worked as the website administrator and editor of a literary magazine publishing short stories and poetry and then as a Wordpress website creator and a book editor and designer.
These days, I write creative nonfiction and political commentary-- Medium recently notified me that I'm a top writer in politics--and am the owner of Reviews for Medium Featured Books.
Some of my creative nonfiction is published here on Medium and in various literary magazines and anthologies: Syndicated, Fifty Word Stories, Entropy, The Daily Abuse: Women’s Accounts of Sexual Violation, Groundwaters, Mothers Always Write, BONED: A collection of skeletal writings, Catapult, Sincerely Magazine, Oregon Humanities Magazine, Work Literary Magazine, Setting Forth—on a Literary Itinerary, TALES OF OUR LIVES — Fork in the Road, bioStories, Our Memoir Collection: Everybody Has a Story, and Cat Fancy Magazine. There may be more; I don't keep this list updated even though, every time I add to it, I remember cold floors and yellow nicotine.
I write because I must; I edit for the same reason. But one thing I do for pure pleasure: Almost every day that it isn't raining or snowing here in my little Oregon retreat, I walk. I walk for miles with my beloved companion, my Silly Lilly.
Silly Lilly chases squirrels. In my old age, I'm rather more sedate.