The Exit Not Taken

As we drove back to Seattle from Cannon Beach last week, we drove past the Vader-Ryderwood exit on I-5, and I realized that exit has particular importance in my life because it’s the exit to the road not taken.

It was the late summer of 1974.  I had two little kids, including a four month old baby, but I needed to go back to work.  My husband made good money and spent same.  In order to keep the bill collectors from knocking on the door, I needed a job and a paycheck.

For the previous seven years I’d worked in the world of education–two years of teaching high school English and five years as a school librarian.  I had a Masters Degree as well as a teaching certificate from Arizona that I was reasonably sure would transfer over to Washington state.  The problem is, we were living in a small western Washington community, Pe Ell, where the teachers tended to die in place.  I was told there were no current openings and weren’t likely to be any in the foreseeable future.

I ended up applying for teaching jobs in other nearby communities.  I also reached out to the local district manager for the Equitable Life Assurance Society, the company where my father had worked for many years.  Policy holders were encouraged to call the local office collect.  I was a policy holder, so I called collect and asked for a job which the district manager, Paul Huntington, subsequently offered. I hesitated, though.  It seemed as though a teaching job would be more in keeping with what I had in mind, but then came a fateful telephone call. In late August the Superintendent of Schools in the Vader/Ryderwood district called to offer me a job, saying in the course of the conversation, “We have this particular class of third graders.”

As he spoke, I could see them in my mind’s eye–a group of scraggly, unruly, mischievous hellions–who had mowed down the first three teachers who’d had the misfortune of being assigned to teach them.  Unfortunately I knew classes just like that–from the inside out.  My grade school class from Greenway School left a trail of retiring, dead, or dying teachers in our wake, including a nervous breakdown or two along the way.

The manner in which the superintendent emphasized the word “particular” sent little warning lights flashing through my psyche.  I told him, thanks, but no thanks, and then called of the district manager in Longview and told him I was his new “man from Equitable.”  (That was their advertising slogan back then–talk to the man from Equitable.  At the time, there had been precious few women allowed to join that “old boys” network).

But join it I did.  Selling insurance was a job I could do and did do–for ten years, long enough to earn a pension, even.  I earned good money, enough to support my kids and me, even when no child support was forthcoming.  But it wasn’t something I loved doing.  It wasn’t something I aspired to.  It wasn’t my dream job.

Still, I wanted to do it to the best of my ability.  So, when I moved to Seattle in the early eighties and the insurance company offered to pay half the freight for any agent who signed up for the Dale Carnegie course, I enrolled immediately.  After all, it seemed to me that a class in “winning friends and influencing people” couldn’t hurt my insurance career.  It turns out I was wrong about that, completely wrong.  Instead of making me a better insurance salesman, it made me quit the insurance business completely.  Not right away, but eventually.

When I arrived at the first class and discovered Dale Carnegie was actually a course in public speaking, I tried to get them to give me a refund.  That was a no-go, so I took the course anyway, doing the required presentations along the way.  One of them called for a talk about something that changed my life, and I spoke about my first husband’s and my chance encounter with a serial killer in 1970 led me to become a far more independent person than I had been before.  Later that night, after the class, one of my fellow students, Carol Erickson, said to me, “Someone should write a book about that.”

I had always wanted to be a writer.  Shortly after our wedding, my first husband, who was allowed in a creative writing class that was closed to me told me there was only going to be one writer in our family and he was it.  So while I was married to him, I put my own writing ambitions on hold.  Other than writing snippets of poetry, I did nothing about my own writing for the next dozen years.

That night, when I heard Carol’s words, the thought that went through my head was, “Why not?  I’m divorced.  What have I got to lose?”  That was on a Thursday night.  On Sunday afternoon, I sat down and started writing my first novel–one that never sold to anyone. Two years later, when I had to choose between selling insurance and writing books, it wasn’t even close.  I left insurance behind in a heartbeat.

Right this moment, I’m forty years and more than fifty published books away from that “particular group of third graders.”  To my knowledge, I’ve never met even one of them, but I’m grateful to them nonetheless.  One thing inevitably leads to another.  That class sent me off on the insurance sales path which led me to Dale Carnegie which led to. . . well . .  here.  All steps are necessary.  No steps may be skipped.

The phone call from that school superintendent was a tipping point in my life–the thing that changed everything.  And each time I pass that Vader/Ryderwood exit, I am filled with thanksgiving to that class and to Robert Frost, too, because that exit not taken really has made all the difference.

10 thoughts on “The Exit Not Taken

  1. I’ve never “met” anyone who actually lived in Pe Ell! I love your line “where teachers tended to die in place.” We lived in Westport for many years, and it was not uncommon for 3 generations in a family all had the same grade school teachers.

    It always interests me how the somewhat random things that happen totally change our lives. For me, it was a single comment some stranger made at a seminar that started the domino effect that changed my life and career.

    I can’t picture where the Vader-Ryderwood exit is. I will now be keeping an eye out for it on our way south next trip. There is always something new in your blog posts that leads to a new adventure.

  2. I’ve never “met” anyone who actually lived in Pe Ell! I love your line “where teachers tended to die in place.” We lived in Westport for many years, and it was not uncommon for 3 generations in a family to all have had the same grade school teachers.

    It always interests me how the somewhat random things that happen totally change our lives. For me, it was a single comment some stranger made at a seminar that started the domino effect that changed my life and career.

    I can’t picture where the Vader-Ryderwood exit is. I will now be keeping an eye out for it on our way south next trip. There is always something new in your blog posts that leads to a new adventure.

  3. This is quite timely for me! Even at age 65 I feel I am at a turning point. Also a former high school English teacher and Cochise County employee in several capacities, among other things. I’ve been doing some proofreading/editing online, but computer issues seem to steer me away from that. I think perhaps the Universe is telling me I should be doing my OWN writing instead. Thanks so much for providing another guidepost for me.

  4. Your fans also have to thank fate that stepped in to start a change of life experience. We never know what road is the right one. 10 -20 years down the road we think to ourselves THANK GOD I did that or I married this one or I bought this stock. As a fan I can only be grateful you missed the exit.. Have a great week

  5. I took the Dale Carnegie class too! I don’t remember much about it except singing “I’m a Little Teapot” in front of the class complete with a little dance…LOL!

  6. A great blog, as usual. It’s always been amazing to me how a chance remark or circumstance can change one’s life. In our case it was a 21 year old (not the brightest bulb in the pack) and her little remark that brought us to WA state from South Dakota. My husband was an Native American, something you do NOT want to be in S.D. He was working in a gas station for $1 an hour and probably would never have gotten a really good job there.
    We moved her, never looked back. He got a great job, we bought a house, and supported our family of 4 kids.
    When I think of what we would have missed if not for that simple remark, it boggles the mind. I always think that God has a plan. The friends, the marriages of kids, the grandkids and now great grandkids. Wow, what a trip.
    We had some bad things happen and whether they would have anyway, I’ll never know. But the good outweighs the bad. Beautiful WA compared to boring S.D. Mountains, the Pacific Ocean, just a beautiful place that I would have never known.
    Thank God for silly little 21 year olds.
    I am so glad, also, that you ended up doing what you did or we wouldn’t have had your wonderful books that I have so enjoyed. And also meeting you and Bill I’ve enjoyed.
    Thanks for great reading,

  7. Just a few minutes ago, I was reminded of Psalm 139; in the Bible Gateway NKJV, it is titled, “God’s perfect knowledge of man.” This post reminded me again of that, especially verse 16: “And in Your book they all were written, the days fashioned for me, when as yet there were none of them.”

    The road, the turn, the choice we didn’t take is gone. Our direction is changed, sometimes in a moment, and if we are listening, the choice is directed by the unseen hand of God.

    I am thankful that you found what your dream was, and we are enjoying that you have done it and are doing it!

  8. What is it that they say … “there are no accidents only happy coincidences”. As always, thank YOU for sharing yours and may you have the BEST week ever!

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