lihtox: (physics)
[personal profile] lihtox
Got the email from Hollins today: they're suspending/restarting their job search. I don't know why: they might have had funding issues, or they might have been able to decide on a candidate, or they might not have been satisfied with any of us. I'm welcome to re-apply, but big deal: I'm welcome to apply for any of the 50 job openings next year, too.

I don't FEEL overwhelmingly disappointed, but I'm afraid that's because this feels like the culmination of what has been a pretty sucky job search. It started out much better than last year's-- I got about twelve phone interviews this time, compared to none-- but the end result was the same, a big fat zero. I've perhaps internalized the notion that I'm unhirable as a tenure-track physicist, so this news merely confirms my self-pity. Or maybe not.

So now we're down to Toledo. Jen's contact at UToledo will be negotiating her package with her boss (provost, president, I dunno, someone) in a few weeks. In some ways, Toledo feels like Dallas all over again: here I go following Jen's job while I end up scrounging around for part-time, temporary positions which aren't what I want to do. Mind you, Dallas hasn't been a complete disaster: I've found jobs, I've found some niches. Heck, if I had been here long-term I'd probably have had a decent chance at getting a real job at UDallas or SMU or Eastfield. And the Toledo situation has a number of inherent advantages over the Dallas situation:
1) The climate is more familiar, so it will feel more like home.
2) It's a day's drive from my family. We can't quite do the trip in a weekend, but maybe over a long weekend, and it doesn't have to involve airplanes, which I loathe for so many reasons.
3) Toledo is a smaller city than Dallas, with less traffic. Hopefully more pleasant.
4) I am resolved to find a better neighborhood to live in. Where we are now there's hardly anywhere pleasant to walk to (and terrible sidewalks), we're right on a major street so we get subwoofers going by all the time. My goal is to live on a side street in a very walkable neighborhood (sidewalks and/or quiet streets), nice park nearby, nice coffee shop/bagel shop within walking distance.
5) We have a baby now, and a baby is a great way to meet neighbors (assuming they actually hang around outside). I've talked to many more local people in the past six months than in the previous decade, it seems. I haven't pursued those relationships because "we're moving so soon", but I might be able to take advantage of this in Toledo.
6) Speaking of "we're moving so soon", Dallas has always felt temporary to me, and so I haven't bothered to find long-term niches. For example, I am sick of the church I've been going to-- hate the music, dislike the pastor-- but I haven't really bothered finding a new one because I know I can just wait it out. I was invited to join the board of one organization I belong to, but didn't. I recently found a stay-at-home Dad's group in Dallas, but I don't feel a lot of motivation to join (also, they always seem to meet way up north). Toledo, on the other hand, is going to be "permanent": at least 5 years, maybe 30 years, maybe life. No more excuses. Find a church, find groups, get involved, feel involved and connected.


So I've applied for a full-time teaching position at Bowling Green (30 minutes south of Toledo) and, will be applying for a visiting position at Ohio Northern (1.2 hours south--yes, Ohio Northern is not particularly northern). I am also going to write to Mark Newman at U Michigan Ann Arbor, which is an hour north of Toledo. Dr. Newman does research in networks, a field I've always been somewhat interested in, and a field I've taken a couple of baby steps into recently. I'm going to ask if he has a post-doc position, and if not, I'm going to see if I can come to his group's meetings (assuming they meet weekly as many research groups do) and become a "groupie" of sorts.

Non-professionally, I hope that we'll be able to move up there in June, so that we will have most of the summer to get settled in and meet people and whatnot before work begins. I'd like to make music a part of my life again, although I still have a fear of choir rehearsals. I'd love to start composing again, and to be in an environment where I can easily find people to read through what I've written. It'd be nice to live near a college campus again (haven't done that since my first year of graduate school).

Well, I'm rambling at this point, but it helps to get it all out. I'm trying to remain optimistic about Toledo, and ignore the nagging little voice of despair.

Date: 2008-04-04 08:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] samtheeagle.livejournal.com
Crap about Hollins. I like the Ann Arbor idea very much.

Date: 2008-04-04 01:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ltlbird.livejournal.com
Argh. So many people I know, myself included, are having really tough job searches... That probably doesn't make you feel better, though.

I, too, think the Ann Arbor idea is a great one. In this job market, it seems like finding a creative way to make yourself known to potential employers is really helpful.

Date: 2008-04-05 02:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottahill.livejournal.com
I'm not sure what effect the overall job market has on academia, though of course it must have some.

The goal with Ann Arbor isn't so much to get in with the University of Michigan, though that wouldn't be terrible. It's that I NEED some people to talk research with on a regular basis-- to stimulate my imagination, to motivate me to publish, to let me know if what I'm doing is worth anything.

By the way, this is a picture of Mark Newman at Ann Arbor: couldn't he be Colin's cousin or something?

Image

Date: 2008-04-04 03:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kcobweb.livejournal.com
Sorry about the Hollins thing. Hopefully something in Ohio/Michigan will come through.

Re: making permanent connections - I think you probably have as much trouble meeting people as I do. :) Having a baby is *great* for that - go for walks in your new neighborhood, and everyone will want to stop and talk to the baby. Also - check out library story hours. Mine has a regular group that attends, so I've kind of gotten to know a few people that way.

Date: 2008-04-05 02:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottahill.livejournal.com
"I think you probably have as much trouble meeting people as I do."
Easily: I'm self-centered, very distrustful of strangers (I'd say xenophobic if that didn't mean racist), with a bad memory for names and personal anecdotes. I might be good at performing in front of a crowd (e.g. Reunion), but one-on-one I'm self-conscious and generally terrible.

"go for walks in your new neighborhood, and everyone will want to stop and talk to the baby."
Definitely my plan; I've already seen that in action around here. It will help to have somewhere nice to walk.

"Also - check out library story hours"
My first reaction is "she's a bit young for that" but I keep forgetting that reading aloud to her helps her learn English faster because it introduces her to more and varied vocabulary. I have not been very good at reading to her. I'll add "within short distance of library" to my list of ideal neighborhoods.

Date: 2008-04-05 02:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kcobweb.livejournal.com
My first reaction is "she's a bit young for that"

Our story hour is billed as "toddler story hour" (they have one for preschool too). The age range is literally from a *few months* old up to 3 or 4 years old. It's a good program because the librarian reads a few stories, and then we sing lots of songs and do activities and stuff. She's very good at reading the kids' moods - some days they are just too wild to sit quietly and listen to a story, and she's able to switch gears and say "Hey! Let's sing a song next!"

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