Oh, yeah. I’ve had ‘em. Some were only mildly horrible—like
the principal who tried to hit on all the young teachers. Tried being the operative word. Then there was the principal who
fired me. Yep. In fact, she let go all the teachers she hadn’t hired. Back in
the day when teachers were in demand, we could teach (in some private schools)
with less than full certification. Mine was in secondary education and I was
teaching first grade. Even though I was taking classes toward an elementary
certificate, it didn’t matter. I knew I was in trouble with her the first time
she visited my classroom when my students weren’t at their desks sitting in straight rows. I
don’t think she ever heard of learning stations. Anyway, I’m sure she got her
wish with my replacement. That experience prompted my leaving the parochial
system for public schools with contracts and tenure.
The one boss that stands out, though, was the one who
changed the whole atmosphere of the workplace. From a relaxed, laid back office
to tension you wouldn’t believe. I can’t say some of us ducked into the nearest
storage or copy room when he walked by, but it was close. So I had two choices.
Quit and lessen the stress in my life, even though it was at the height of the
worst recession in recent history and meant losing health insurance my husband and
I needed. Or sucking it up and staying. I stayed. My stress level went up. I
had no energy left for writing and quit what I loved instead of the job. When we could afford
COBRA to cover the gap until Medicare kicked in, I retired. What a relief. My
energy came back and writing became fun again.
In my soon-to-be released
science fiction romance, The Chameleon (an Outer Rim Novel). I exaggerate (slightly) my own horrible boss. When Jileena
complains to her father (the company owner) about his new Chief Operating
Officer, she mentions all I experienced and more.
Here's a brief blurb:
Legally Blond meets Mata Hari
Socialite Jileena Winslott has
perfected the image of the spoiled, rich, bubble-headed daughter of an
industrial magnate. In reality, she’s a smart, savvy aide to her father in
social situations where she is his eyes and ears. She yearns to be her true
self and run the family business. When her father sends her on a covert mission
to the Outer Rim, she has the chance to prove herself. Big problem. He insists
she take along a fake fiancé—the man she’s secretly loved for years.
I
blog here on the 8th and 30th of each month and Mondays on my own site http://dianeburton.blogspot.com
8 comments:
Good stuff, Diane. The book, I mean, not the horrible bosses. Love that cover. Best of luck with Outer Rim, in this world and beyond...
At least they provided fodder for not so fictional fiction! Cool cover!
Thanks, Margo, I love the cover, too.
Jannine, you just never know about life experiences. Maybe the worse they are the better fodder they are.
Those nasty bosses need to become villains in future books. I've revisited several bad bosses, placed them in different roles and let my imagination have free rein. Such fun. Thanks for the thoughtful post.
Diane, your last work experience sounds a lot like mine. I worked until COBRA would cover the gap before Medicare kicked in for my husband. That way we only had to buy one individual policy. It's been a little over a year, and I'm still recovering.
How awful! I have been fortunate that I've never had a boss that horrible. So glad you were able to retire and get away to do what you really love. Congrats on the new release...I need to grab a copy soon.
Betsy, I used one of Hubs' bosses (one who let him go) in a story. All the way thru I called him "[real name] the turd." Talk about cathartic. After I let Hubs read the story, I did a global change. :( No sense courting trouble.
Alison, wasn't it a relief?
Alicia, I was very lucky that I could retire. Sometimes, health (mental & physical) is worth more than a paycheck.
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