Unless something unexpected happens, I have taken my last work trip. I can remember back in the early 1980's my boss flew to San Francisco for the National Association of Home Builders Annual Meeting, and I was so envious. I wanted a position that included work travel. That was one of the drivers for me going onto University, the biggest different between his job and my job, was higher education. So I worked on it. A few years later, I did my first work trip, self-funded to a training event in Phoenix. When I finished law school, and started in a legal service program, I was sent - on very short notice - to New Orleans for three days of training on the case management software. It was a good trip. Then the next year to a conference on consumer law. About that time I realized that if I was speaking at a conference the office would pay my travel, and I started looking for a couple of conferences a year to speak at. That got me noticed and I picked up a consulting contract to do training for AARP. That brought two to six trips a year. And that work got me noticed by the ABA, and when a job opened up I was encouraged to apply.
My first 8 years at the ABA I had a travel budget that I could spend on anything related to my work. It didn't matter if I was speaking or observing, I could go. I mourned the loss of the travel budget, but usually had money to travel. A couple of years we had "use-it-or-lose-it" money that needed to be spent on something relevant to the work, and extra travel was an easy way to use some of it.
I have enjoyed that part of the work. Only a couple of times did the amount of travel bother me. Then along came COVID and I went from almost too much travel, to none. It has been nice to be back at it.
Don't get me wrong. It has been work. I have had a lot of long days, leaving for the airport before dawn, getting home late at night. Only once did I get stuck overnight in the airport and not make it home until the crack of dawn the next day. I have had a few delayed bags, only one of those caused a panic and it did show up.
Now travel will be what I want to do. When I want to do it. I might do some consulting work, if I do it will likely include some travel.
Not everyone would have relished that amount of travel but I would have found it stimulating I'm sure. Instead, I was mostly stuck in a classroom with thirty adolescents.
ReplyDeleteFrom the hints on your blog, it was not 30 years in the same classroom.
DeleteI enjoyed some work travel but would not have been happy with the level of travel you've enjoyed.
ReplyDeleteI always tried to find joy in it.
DeleteI love to travel but too much and i'm suddenly homesick.
ReplyDeleteIt is nice to return home.
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